基因组数据支持联邦名单上的El Segundo Blue (Euphilotes bernardino/Battoides allyni)升至物种地位

D. Rubinoff, Travis Longcore, J. Dupuis, Kendall H. Osborne
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Even the species assignment for the El Segundo Blue, perhaps one of the most intensively studied butterflies in the United States, is divided between E. battoides allyni (Pratt and Emmel 1998, Scott 1986, USFWS 2008) and E. bernardino allyni (Mattoni et al. 2001, Shields and Reveal 1988). All Euphilotes rely entirely on Buckwheats (Eriogonum, Polygonaceae), feeding on the inflorescences as larvae, and nectaring on the flowers as adults. Often, when different species of Euphilotes are sympatric, each relies on a single, different, species of Eriogonum, even when several buckwheat species are present in an area. Thus, a combination of morphological, phenological and hostplant data are often needed to separate species in the genus (Opler and Wright 1999). Because of its unique ecology and limited habitat on coastal sand dunes in southern California, the El Segundo Blue (ESB) was one of the first insects listed under the Endangered Species Act in 1976, only a few months after the first insect listed, Schaus’ Swallowtail (Heraclides aristodemus ponceanus). ESB has been the subject of intensive ecological studies and reintroduction efforts (Mattoni 1992, Mattoni et al. 2000, 2001), but has remained precariously limited in its range. In 2004, a morphologically similar population was discovered on coastal sand dunes, whose larvae also feed on Eriogonum parvifolum, over 150 miles to the north at Vandenberg Air Force Base (VAFB) in Santa Barbara County. This population was assigned to E. battoides allyni based on ecology and mitochondrial DNA haplotype information (Pratt and Stouthamer 2008). If this were actually E. b. allyni, it would have constituted a substantial extension to its known range and suggested a much more secure future for the species, being present on protected dunes on VAFB. Dupuis et al. (2020) conducted a genomic study of Euphilotes populations on multiple species of Eriogonum across southern California encompassing the new VAFB populations, ESB from all populations and other E. bernardino/ battoides populations from Santa Barbara through San Diego counties, including butterflies from coastal, inland desert and montane habitats. Their results not only demonstrated that ESB was not closely related to the populations at VAFB, but also that they were highly divergent from all surrounding E. bernardino / battoides populations (Fig. 1). The original subspecific description of E. b. allyni notes that two male E. battoides from Cedros Island, Baja California, Mexico also “fit the description” of allyni (Shields, 1975), so convergence of characteristics within isolated coastal populations, as seen at VAFB, was not unprecedented. As Figure 1 demonstrates, E. bernardino populations from areas of Los Angeles County that are adjacent to ESB coastal dune and bluff habitats are more closely related to other E. bernardino populations in the mountains and valleys of Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Riverside, and San Diego counties than they are to ESB (Dupuis et al. 2020). These levels of divergence across the genome in Dupuis et al. 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If this were actually E. b. allyni, it would have constituted a substantial extension to its known range and suggested a much more secure future for the species, being present on protected dunes on VAFB. Dupuis et al. (2020) conducted a genomic study of Euphilotes populations on multiple species of Eriogonum across southern California encompassing the new VAFB populations, ESB from all populations and other E. bernardino/ battoides populations from Santa Barbara through San Diego counties, including butterflies from coastal, inland desert and montane habitats. Their results not only demonstrated that ESB was not closely related to the populations at VAFB, but also that they were highly divergent from all surrounding E. bernardino / battoides populations (Fig. 1). 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引用次数: 2

摘要

El Segundo Blue, Euphilotes battoides allyni(也被列为Euphilotes bernardino allyni),由Shields(1975)在Shijimiaeoides属中作为蝙蝠属的一部分被描述。对真草属和种群的归属都经历了反复的修正和重新归属(例如,Pelham 2008, Pratt and Emmel 1998),并且在三个类群(E. rita, E. battoides和E. enoptes)中,哪个类群具有种地位或属于哪个物种的争论很活跃。即使是El Segundo Blue(可能是美国研究最深入的蝴蝶之一)的物种分配也分为E. battoides allyni (Pratt and Emmel 1998, Scott 1986, USFWS 2008)和E. bernardino allyni (Mattoni et al. 2001, Shields and Reveal 1988)。所有的真核植物完全依赖于荞麦(Eriogonum,蓼科),幼虫以花序为食,成虫以花为食。通常,当不同种类的荞麦是同域的,每个依赖于一个单一的,不同的,荞麦品种,甚至当几个荞麦品种存在于一个地区。因此,通常需要结合形态学、物候学和寄主植物数据来区分属中的物种(Opler和Wright 1999)。由于其独特的生态环境和南加州沿海沙丘上有限的栖息地,埃尔塞甘多蓝(ESB)是1976年被列入濒危物种法案的首批昆虫之一,仅仅在第一个被列入的昆虫之后几个月,Schaus ' s Swallowtail (Heraclides aristodemus ponceanus)。ESB一直是深入生态学研究和重新引入努力的主题(Mattoni 1992, Mattoni et al. 2000, 2001),但其范围仍然不稳定。2004年,在圣巴巴拉县范登堡空军基地(VAFB)以北150多英里的海岸沙丘上发现了一个形态相似的种群,它们的幼虫也以小叶藻为食。根据生态学和线粒体DNA单倍型信息,将该种群归属于褐裂裂裂卵(E. battoides allyni) (Pratt and Stouthamer 2008)。如果这真的是e.b. allyni,它将构成其已知范围的实质性扩展,并表明该物种的未来更加安全,存在于VAFB上受保护的沙丘上。Dupuis等人(2020)对南加州多种Eriogonum的Euphilotes种群进行了一项基因组研究,包括新的VAFB种群、来自所有种群的ESB以及来自圣巴巴拉至圣地亚哥县的其他E. bernardino/ battoides种群,包括来自沿海、内陆沙漠和山地栖息地的蝴蝶。他们的研究结果不仅表明ESB与VAFB的种群关系不密切,而且它们与周围所有E. bernardino / battoides种群高度不同(图1)。对e.b. allyni的原始亚特异性描述指出,来自墨西哥下加利福尼亚州Cedros岛的两只雄性e.b battoides也“符合”allyni的描述(Shields, 1975),因此在孤立的沿海种群中特征趋同,正如在VAFB看到的那样。并不是没有先例。如图1所示,来自洛杉矶县毗邻ESB海岸沙丘和悬崖栖息地地区的E. bernardino种群与洛杉矶、圣贝纳迪诺、里弗赛德和圣地亚哥县的山脉和山谷中的其他E. bernardino种群的关系比与ESB的关系更密切(Dupuis et al. 2020)。Dupuis等人(2020)的这些基因组差异水平在mtDNA中没有得到相同水平的反映(种群之间的COI单倍型多样性范围为0-0.907,Tajima 's D在大多数种群中为负),这表明仅依靠mtDNA进行保护存在潜在问题,并表明ESB是一个独特的物种,长期以来一直与周围的Euphilotes种群分离并分化。因此我们提升e·贝纳迪诺/ battoides allyni全部物种地位Euphilotes allyni。模式标本继续保存在佛罗里达大学的McGuire中心(图1所示的全模)。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Genomic Data Support the Elevation of the Federally Listed El Segundo Blue (Euphilotes bernardino/Battoides allyni) to Species Status
The El Segundo Blue, Euphilotes battoides allyni (also listed as Euphilotes bernardino allyni), was described in the genus Shijimiaeoides as part of the battoides species group by Shields (1975). Both the genus and species group assignments in Euphilotes have undergone repeated revisions and reassignments (e.g., Pelham 2008, Pratt and Emmel 1998) and debate is active about which taxa merit species status or belong to which species in each of the three groups (E. rita, E. battoides and E. enoptes). Even the species assignment for the El Segundo Blue, perhaps one of the most intensively studied butterflies in the United States, is divided between E. battoides allyni (Pratt and Emmel 1998, Scott 1986, USFWS 2008) and E. bernardino allyni (Mattoni et al. 2001, Shields and Reveal 1988). All Euphilotes rely entirely on Buckwheats (Eriogonum, Polygonaceae), feeding on the inflorescences as larvae, and nectaring on the flowers as adults. Often, when different species of Euphilotes are sympatric, each relies on a single, different, species of Eriogonum, even when several buckwheat species are present in an area. Thus, a combination of morphological, phenological and hostplant data are often needed to separate species in the genus (Opler and Wright 1999). Because of its unique ecology and limited habitat on coastal sand dunes in southern California, the El Segundo Blue (ESB) was one of the first insects listed under the Endangered Species Act in 1976, only a few months after the first insect listed, Schaus’ Swallowtail (Heraclides aristodemus ponceanus). ESB has been the subject of intensive ecological studies and reintroduction efforts (Mattoni 1992, Mattoni et al. 2000, 2001), but has remained precariously limited in its range. In 2004, a morphologically similar population was discovered on coastal sand dunes, whose larvae also feed on Eriogonum parvifolum, over 150 miles to the north at Vandenberg Air Force Base (VAFB) in Santa Barbara County. This population was assigned to E. battoides allyni based on ecology and mitochondrial DNA haplotype information (Pratt and Stouthamer 2008). If this were actually E. b. allyni, it would have constituted a substantial extension to its known range and suggested a much more secure future for the species, being present on protected dunes on VAFB. Dupuis et al. (2020) conducted a genomic study of Euphilotes populations on multiple species of Eriogonum across southern California encompassing the new VAFB populations, ESB from all populations and other E. bernardino/ battoides populations from Santa Barbara through San Diego counties, including butterflies from coastal, inland desert and montane habitats. Their results not only demonstrated that ESB was not closely related to the populations at VAFB, but also that they were highly divergent from all surrounding E. bernardino / battoides populations (Fig. 1). The original subspecific description of E. b. allyni notes that two male E. battoides from Cedros Island, Baja California, Mexico also “fit the description” of allyni (Shields, 1975), so convergence of characteristics within isolated coastal populations, as seen at VAFB, was not unprecedented. As Figure 1 demonstrates, E. bernardino populations from areas of Los Angeles County that are adjacent to ESB coastal dune and bluff habitats are more closely related to other E. bernardino populations in the mountains and valleys of Los Angeles, San Bernardino, Riverside, and San Diego counties than they are to ESB (Dupuis et al. 2020). These levels of divergence across the genome in Dupuis et al. (2020) were not reflected at the same levels in mtDNA (COI haplotype diversity between populations ranged from 0–0.907, and Tajima’s D was negative for most populations), suggesting potential problems with relying on just mtDNA for conservation purposes and indicating that ESB is a unique species that has long been isolated and diverged from surrounding Euphilotes populations. We therefore elevate E. bernardino / battoides allyni to full species status as Euphilotes allyni. Type specimens continue to be held at the McGuire Center, University of Florida (holotype pictured in Figure 1).
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