| Literature DB >> 23028478 |
Rodolphe Rougerie1, Stefan Naumann, Wolfgang A Nässig.
Abstract
The wild silkmoth genus Sinobirma Bryk, 1944 is a poorly known monotypic taxon from the eastern end of the Himalaya Range. It was convincingly proposed to be closely related to some members of an exclusively Afro-tropical group of Saturniidae, but its biogeographical and evolutionary history remains enigmatic. After examining recently collected material from Tibet, northern India, and northeastern Myanmar, we realized that this unique species, S. malaisei Bryk, 1944 only known so far from a few specimens and from a very restricted area near the border between north-eastern Myanmar and the Yunnan province of China, may in fact belong to a group of closely related cryptic species. In this work, we combined morphological comparative study, DNA barcoding, and the sequences of a nuclear marker (D2 expansion segment of the 28S rRNA gene) to unequivocally delimit three distinct species in the genus Sinobirma, of which two are described as new to science: S. myanmarensis sp. n. and S. bouyeri sp. n. An informative DNA barcode sequence was obtained from the female holotype of S. malaisei--collected in 1934--ensuring the proper assignation of this name to the newly collected and studied specimens. Our findings represent another example of the potential of coupling traditional taxonomy and DNA barcoding for revealing and solving difficult cases of cryptic diversity. This approach is now being generalized to the world fauna of Saturniidae, with the participation of most of the taxonomists studying these moths.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 23028478 PMCID: PMC3446977 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0043920
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
List of the samples used for the genetic analysis.
| Taxon | Sex | Dep. | Country, region | Alt. (m) | SampleID | COI | 28S |
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| F | NHRS | Myanmar, Kachin | 2000 | barcode SNB 1700 | 658[230n]/JN704367 | |
| F | MNHN | China, Yunnan | 2080 | BC-MNHN0016 | 658/JN704363 | 525/JN704392 | |
| M | MNHN | China, Yunnan | 2080 | BC-MNHN0017 | 658/JN704364 | ||
| M | MNHN | China, Yunnan | 2080 | BC-MNHN0018 | 609/JN704365 | 525/JN704393 | |
| M | RCRR | China, Yunnan | 2080 | BC-Roug0001 | 658/JN704366 | 525/JN704394 | |
| M | CSNB | China,Yunnan | 1700 | barcode SNB 618 | 658/JN704368 | ||
| M | CSNB | China, Yunnan | 1470 | barcode SNB 1687 | 658/GU703010 | 525/JN704396 | |
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| M | MNHU | Myanmar, Kachin | 1850 | barcode SNB 617 | 658/JN704369 | 511/JN704397 |
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| M | CSNB | Myanmar, Sagaing | 1000 | barcode SNB 613 | 645/JN704373 | 511/JN704401 |
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| M | CSNB | Myanmar, Sagaing | 1000 | barcode SNB 614 | 658/JN704372 | 511/JN704400 |
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| M | CSNB | Myanmar, Kachin | 950 | barcode SNB 615 | 658/JN704371 | 511/JN704399 |
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| M | CSNB | Myanmar, Kachin | 1850 | barcode SNB 616 | 658/JN704370 | 511/JN704398 |
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| F | SMFL | China, Tibet | 2000 | BC-TB0165 | 658/JN704362 | |
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| F | CTBO | China, Tibet | 2000 | BC-TB0166 | 658/JN704361 | 525/JN704391 |
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| F | CTBO | China, Tibet | 2000 | BC-TB0167 | 658/JN704360 | 525/JN704390 |
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| M | CSLL | India, Arunachal P. | 2000 | barcode SNB 1562 | 658/HM416785 | |
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| M | CSNB | India, Arunachal P. | 2000 | barcode SNB 1688 | 649/GU703007 | 525/JN704395 |
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| F | MNHN | Madagascar, Masoala | 20 | BC-MNHN0072 | 658/JN704359 |
HT = holotype; PT = paratype; Dep. = depository collection (see text for abbreviations); F = female; M = male. SampleID codes are unique identifiers referring to individual records in the Barcode of Life Datasystems (BOLD, www.boldsystems.org); sequence length (bp) and GenBank accession numbers are given in separate columns for each gene.
Figure 1Phylogenetic analyses of sequence data.
All trees shown are ML trees obtained from the analysis of (a) COI barcode sequences, (b) 28S rDNA sequences, and (c) the combination of both genes; values above branches are bootstrap supports for each node. Branch lengths represent the number of substitutions per site. Trees (b) and (c) are unrooted.
Percentage of divergence in DNA barcode sequences.
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| [0.3] | ||
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| 4.4 | [0.6] | |
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| 5.4 | 4.6 | [0.3] |
Kimura 2-parameter (K2P) distances (%) for barcode DNA sequences of the three analyzed species in genus Sinobirma; minimal pairwise distances between species are given for each species pair; values in square brackets represent maximal intraspecific distances.
Variations within sequences of 28S rRNA.
| Unique substitutions | Unique indels | |
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| 2 | - |
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| 10 | - |
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| 43 | 5 |
indels length of 5, 17, 1, 2 and 3 bp in position 298, 306, 338, 372 and 448 respectively.
Sequence comparison of 28S rRNA sequences by reference to Sinobirma myanmarensis, the only species in three missing indels and tentatively considered as representing the ancestral condition (see text). Number within square brackets refers to substitutions located within indels.
Figure 2Specimens of Sinobirma malaisei; (A, C, D, F) = dorsal view, (B, E, G) = ventral view.
Scale bars = 1 cm; specimens approximately to the same scale. (A–B): holotype ♀, Myanmar, Kachin State (S), Kambaiti; in NHRS. (C): ♀, China, Yunnan, Tongbinguan nature reserve; in MNHN. (D–E): ♂, China, Yunnan, Gaoligongshan; in CSNB. (F–G): ♂, China, Yunnan, Yingjiang, Xima; in CSNB. (H): ova, China, Yunnan. (I–K): 1st larval instar, rearing attempt from the eggs in Fig. 1H.
Figure 3Specimens of Sinobirma myanmarensis; (A, C, E, G, I, K) = dorsal view, (B, D, F, H, J, L) = ventral view.
Scale bars = 1 cm; specimens approximately to the same scale. (A–B): holotype (HT) ♂, Myanmar, Kachin State (N), Chudu Razi Range; in ZMHU. (C–D): paratype (PT) ♂, same data as HT; in CSNB. (E–F): PT ♂, Myanmar, Kachin State (N), E Putao; in CSNB. (G–L): PT ♂♂ (G–J) and ♀ (K–L), Myanmar, Sagaing State, E Ngalung Ga; in CSNB.
Figure 4Specimens of Sinobirma bouyeri; (A, C, E, G, H) = dorsal view, (B, D, F, I, J) = ventral view.
Scale bars = 1 cm; specimens approximately to the same scale. (A–B): holotype (HT) ♀, China, Tibet, Tomi; photo T. Bouyer; in SMFL. (C–F): paratype (PT) ♀♀, same data as HT; in CSNB & CTBO. (G–J): PT ♂♂, India, Arunachal Pradesh, near Rapum; in CSNB & CSLL.
Figure 5♂ genitalia of Sinobirma species; each panel represent a posterior view of the main genital structure at the top, the phallus immediately below, and the posterior end of 8th sternite and tergite at the bottom.
Scale bars = 1 mm. (A): S. malaisei. China, Yunnan, Gaoligongshan; no. 2024/09 Naumann. (B): S. myanmarensis. Myanmar, Kachin, Chudu Razi Range, no. 2022/09 Naumann. (C): S. bouyeri. India, Arunachal Pradesh, near Rapum, no. 2021/09 Naumann. (D): S. myanmarensis. Myanmar, Sagaing, E Ngalung Ga, no. 2023/09 Naumann.
Figure 6Female genitalia of Sinobirma malaisei, China, Yunnan, Tongbinguan nature reserve; (A) ventral view, (B) lateral view (drawings reproduced from
[ ). Scale bars = 1 mm.
Figure 7Map showing the known distribution of the species of Sinobirma in Asia.
Symbols may represent more than one locality in close proximity; type localities are indicated by a black dot within the symbol. The locality cited in Vinciguerra & Racheli [6] for S. malaisei is represented by a white symbol.
Summary of the material examined and of diagnostic morphological characters between the three Sinobirma species studied.
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| Myanmar, Kambaiti (type loc.): 4 ♂♂, 2 ♀♀) | China, Yunnan: 15 ♂♂, 2 ♀♀ | Myanmar, N. Kachin & Sagaing: 20 ♂♂, 1 ♀ | China, Tibet: 3 ♀♀ | India, Arunachal Pradesh: 7 ♂♂ | |
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| grey | grey | grey | grey | only weakly marked, grey |
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| grey, touching discal ocellus proximally | grey, touching discal ocellus proximally in most but not all specimens | grey, proximal to discal ocellus, rarely touching it | black, running through ocellus centre or touching it proximally | weakly indicated, grey, proximal and distant to ocellus |
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| reddish brown, straight and ending near the apex | reddish brown, straight and ending near the apex | reddish brown, straight, bent towards apex | dark reddish brown, broad, straight and ending near the apex like in | reddish brown, straight, ending further away from the apex than in |
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| grey | grey | grey | grey, weakly marked | grey |
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| grey, touching discal ocellus proximally | grey, touching discal ocellus proximally | grey, proximal to discal ocellus, sometimes touching it | dark grey, straight through ocellus | grey, straight through ocellus |
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| reddish brown, zig-zagged | reddish brown, zig-zagged | reddish brown, wavy | dark reddish brown, wavy | reddish brown, wavy |
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| ♂♂ & ♀♀: circled reddish brown proximally, distally black | ♂♂ & ♀♀: circled reddish brown proximally, distally black | ♂♂: circled reddish brown, ♀: internal ring black, external ring red | ♀♀: circled black | ♂♂: circled dark reddish brown to black, slight variation |
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| ♂♂ & ♀♀: circled black, with reddish proximal blur | ♂♂: circled in thick black distally, narrow reddish brown proximally; ♀♀: reddish proximal part thicker | ♂♂: circled black internally, reddish brown externally ♀: thick black ring internally, reddish brown ring externally | ♀♀: thick black circle | ♂♂: thick black circle |
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| yellowish | yellowish | orangy to reddish | dark reddish brown | yellowish |
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| ♀♀: Fw apex almost rectangular; reddish colour in Fw postmedian field less intense than in other species | ♀♀: Fw apex almost rectangular , reddish colour in Fw postmedian field less intense than in other species | ♀: with slightly acute fw apex; reddish colour in Fw postmedian field more intense | ♀♀: Fw apex almost rectangular; wings more rounded; reddish colour in Fw postmedian field more intense | ♂♂: wingshape more rounded |
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| with two long slender processes closely originating from a mutual plate | with two distant, short and quite acute processes, originating from the posterior margin of the sternite | (♀♀ only) | distinctly shorter than in | |
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| broader than in other species, with posterior angles more acute and a narrow and deep median indentation in its posterior margin | narrower, posterior angles more rounded, median indentation broad and shallow | (♀♀ only) | broad, trapezoid, with posterior angles rounded, median indentation very small | |
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| dorsal processes rounded, a slight central indentation, ear-like, slightly excavated ventrally; hook-like tip disto-ventrally | as in | (♀♀ only) | dorsal processes slightly more deeply indentated; disto-ventral hook more pronounced | |
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| two closely contiguous small apical lobes | two apical lobes more prominent and separated (esp. ventral lobe) | (♀♀ only) | two apical lobes intermediate between the two others species | |