Literature DB >> 23316099

Molecular phylogeny of the Athetini-Lomechusini-Ecitocharini clade of aleocharine rove beetles (Insecta).

Hallvard Elven1, Lutz Bachmann, Vladimir I Gusarov.   

Abstract

Elven, E., Bachmann, L. & Gusarov V. I. (2012) Molecular phylogeny of the Athetini-Lomechusini-Ecitocharini clade of aleocharine rove beetles (Insecta). -Zoologica Scripta, 41, 617-636.It has previously been shown that the Aleocharinae tribes Athetini and Lomechusini form a well-supported clade, which also includes the small Neotropical tribe Ecitocharini. However, neither Athetini nor Lomechusini were recovered as monophyletic. In this study, we addressed the basal phylogenetic relationships among the three tribes using sequence data from (i) a mitochondrial fragment covering the COI, Leu2 and COII genes; (ii) a mitochondrial fragment covering part of the 16S gene, the Leu1 gene and part of the NADH 1 gene; and (iii) a part of the nuclear 18S gene, for 68 Athetini, 33 Lomechusini and 2 Ecitocharini species, plus representatives from 10 other tribes. The athetine subtribe Geostibina was recovered as sister group to the 'true Lomechusini', which included the type genus Lomechusa. The two clades formed a sister group to the main Athetini clade, which also included Ecitocharini and the 'false Lomechusini', a group of New World genera normally placed in Lomechusini. The following changes in classification are proposed: (i) Geostibina Seevers, 1978 is raised to tribal rank, and 13 Athetini genera are placed in Geostibini; (ii) Ecitodonia Seevers, 1965; Ecitopora Wasmann, 1887, and Tetradonia Wasmann, 1894 are moved from Lomechusini to Athetini; (iii) Ecitocharini Seevers, 1965 is placed in synonymy with Athetini; (iv) Discerota Mulsant & Rey, 1874 is tentatively included in Oxypodini; (v) Actocharina Bernhauer, 1907 is placed in synonymy with Hydrosmecta Thomson, 1858.

Entities:  

Year:  2012        PMID: 23316099      PMCID: PMC3532658          DOI: 10.1111/j.1463-6409.2012.00553.x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Zool Scr        ISSN: 0300-3256            Impact factor:   3.140


Introduction

The rove beetles (Staphylinidae) are one of the two largest families of Coleoptera, comprising (with Scydmaeninae) 32 extant subfamilies and more than 55 000 species (O’Keefe 2005; Thayer 2005; Grebennikov & Newton 2009; Bouchard ). The Aleocharinae [ca. 1200 genera and 13 000 species (Thayer 2005)] are the largest subfamily within Staphylinidae and also one of the most challenging because of the large number of small and morphologically very similar species. Until now, relatively few phylogenetic studies of aleocharines have been published, whether morphology-based (e.g. Kistner & Jacobson 1990; Steidle & Dettner 1993; Muona 1997; Ahn 2001; Ahn & Ashe 2004; Ashe 2005; Paśnik 2010), molecular (Maus ; Thomas 2009; Elven ) or both (Ahn ). The current classification of the subfamily (e.g. Smetana 2004; Ashe 2007; Bouchard ) is based mainly on intuitive assessments of morphological characters, and even today, new aleocharine tribes are being erected without phylogenetic justification (e.g. Klimaszewski ). In a recent study, Elven addressed the molecular phylogeny of Athetini, the largest of the aleocharine tribes. Their most important discovery was the AthetiniLomechusini–Ecitocharini clade (further referred to as the ALE clade), a well-supported monophyletic group consisting of the genera traditionally included in three different tribes. Within the ALE clade, the tribes Lomechusini and Ecitocharini were found nested within Athetini. Furthermore, the Lomechusini were not recovered as monophyletic, but formed two separate clades within the ALE clade. These unexpected but statistically well-supported results indicated the need for a tribe-level revision of the whole ALE clade. However, Elven could not do so as their taxon sampling was heavily biased towards their primary focus, the phylogeny of Athetini. The Lomechusini were represented by just three genera and four species, and Ecitocharini were represented by only a single species. A more comprehensive sampling of Lomechusini and Ecitocharini was needed before phylogeny-based changes in the tribe-level classification could be seriously considered. In this study, we specifically address this issue using a broader taxon sample for all three tribes. The tribe Athetini Casey, 1910 is distributed worldwide and includes more than 170 genera and thousands of species (Newton ). The genus Atheta alone includes 1700 species (A. F. Newton, unpublished data). The majority of athetines are free living, while a few are associated with ants or termites. The tribe is traditionally diagnosed based on a combination of several characters, for example, galea and lacinia of moderate length, tarsal formula 4-5-5, mesocoxae narrowly or moderately separated, mesoventral process narrow, athetine bridge of aedeagus present. However, none of these characters is unique to Athetini. An older available family group name, Callicerini Jakobson, 1908 (non Rondani, 1845), exists for this tribe, but Athetini Casey, 1910 is the name currently in prevailing use (Newton & Thayer 1992). An application has been submitted to the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature to conserve the name Athetini and suppress Callicerini (Gusarov 2011). The tribe Lomechusini Fleming, 1821 is distributed worldwide, but is most diverse in tropical regions. It includes more than 200 genera and over 2200 species (Hlaváč ), most of which are associated with ants or termites. The tribe is poorly defined and is traditionally diagnosed by a combination of characters, for example, galea and lacinia significantly elongate, tarsal formula 4-5-5, mesocoxae broadly separated, mesoventral process short and broad, athetine bridge of aedeagus present (Newton ). Not surprisingly, some genera have repeatedly been moved in and out of Lomechusini (e.g. Meronera: cf. Newton and Navarrete-Heredia ). The Neotropical tribe Ecitocharini Seevers, 1965 includes only 10 genera of derived myrmecophiles associated with army ants of the genus Eciton (Kistner & Jacobson 1990). The tribe is diagnosed based on a combination of characters (galea and lacinia of moderate length, tarsal formula 4-5-5, particular glands and gland reservoirs present, mesoventral process narrow, body with distinct polygonal microsculpture) (Kistner & Jacobson 1990). Phylogenetic relationships involving members of the ALE clade have been studied in several publications. The conclusions and limitations of the studies most relevant for the current study are briefly reviewed here in chronological order. Kistner & Jacobson (1990) revised and redefined the tribe Ecitocharini and conducted a cladistic analysis of the tribe based on 22 morphological characters. The ingroup included all 10 genera of Ecitocharini, but the outgroup included only a single albeit very large and morphologically diverse genus, Zyras. The species used to code the character states for Zyras was/were not mentioned. Thus, this study was not designed to test the monophyly of Ecitocharini or to rigorously infer relationships among the ingroup taxa. Steidle & Dettner (1993) studied the morphology and chemistry of the abdominal tergal gland of 22 aleocharine species from nine tribes (adjusted to current classification). Adding further data from published descriptions of the tergal gland and its products, they constructed a matrix of nine morphological and chemical characters for 27 species from 10 tribes, including six Lomechusini and eight Athetini species. Ecitocharini were not included. In their phylogenetic tree, Athetini, Lomechusini and Aleocharini formed a clade supported by just a single apomorphy (gland reservoir large). Together with Oxypodini (excluding the subtribe Dinardina), they formed a larger clade supported by the presence of two groups of products in the gland secretion. Species belonging to the same tribe/subtribe were lumped into a single terminal taxon, and the study was thus not designed to test the monophyly of the included tribes. Muona (1997) used 87 binary morphological characters in an analysis of 41 genera from 12 aleocharine tribes aimed at testing the monophyly of Athetini. Ecitocharini were not represented, but the study included the dorylophilous tribe Mimanommatini (listed as Dorylomimini). Unfortunately, the character matrix, phylogenetic trees and other details have not been published, and the main results were only summarized in an abstract for the 15th Meeting of the Willi Hennig Society (Muona 1997). Athetini were recovered as paraphyletic, while Lomechusini were polyphyletic. Six tribes (Myllaenini, Lomechusini, Hoplandriini, Termitohospitini, Termitodiscini and Mimanommatini) formed a clade within Athetini. It is noteworthy that three morphologically highly derived tribes, the myrmecophilous Mimanommatini and the termitophilous Termitohospitini and Termitodiscini, were nested within Athetini. Ashe (2005) used 27 larval and 133 adult morphological characters to infer a phylogeny of the tachyporine-group subfamilies of Staphylinidae. For the Aleocharinae, 29 genera from 13 tribes were included with the aim to resolve the basal phylogenetic relationships of the subfamily. Athetini were represented by the genera Atheta, Geostiba and Pontomalota, and Lomechusini by Zyras and Drusilla. Ecitocharini were not included. Lomechusini were recovered as monophyletic, while relationships among the three Athetini genera or between Athetini, Lomechusini and the other tribes of ‘higher’ Aleocharinae (sensu Ashe 2005) remained unresolved. Thomas (2009) published the first molecular phylogeny of Aleocharinae, based on nucleotide sequences of the mitochondrial 12S and 16S RNA genes. The study included eight tribes, with Athetini being represented by three genera. Lomechusini and Ecitocharini were not included. In the resulting trees, the relationships among the athetine genera, or between these and the other included tribes, were not resolved. Paśnik (2010) published a comprehensive morphological phylogeny of the tribe Tachyusini, usually considered a subtribe of Oxypodini (e.g. Seevers 1978; Smetana 2004). The study was based on 159 adult morphological characters and included 84 species from 14 aleocharine tribes. Athetini sensu Paśnik were represented by four genera: Aloconota, Atheta, Dinaraea and Liogluta. Lomechusini were represented by four genera: Amaurodera, Drusilla, Trachyota and Zyras. Also included was Meronera, which has been alternatively placed in Lomechusini (e.g. Newton ), Oxypodini (Seevers 1978), Tachyusini (Ashe 1985) and Falagriini (Pace 2008). The central result of Paśnik’s study was the recovery of a strongly supported clade, Tachyusini sensu Paśnik. Many of the recovered relationships were surprising, and an investigation into the underlying character matrix revealed serious issues with the interpretation and weighting of many important tribal characters, a fact that strongly undermines the validity of Paśnik’s results. One example with a direct bearing on the current study is the athetine bridge in the median lobe of the aedeagus, an important character shared by the Athetini and Lomechusini, which Paśnik erroneously interpreted as missing in Lomechusini, the athetine genus Thamiaraea, and in Meronera. Elven presented the first comprehensive molecular phylogeny of Athetini. The study included 80 aleocharine species from 11 tribes. Athetini were represented by 27 genera and 58 species, Lomechusini by three genera and four species, and Ecitocharini by a single species. Also included was the genus Meronera (see above). They discovered the ALE clade, consisting of the three tribes Athetini, Lomechusini and Ecitocharini. Within the ALE clade, the athetine genera Geostiba and Earota formed a sister group to the lomechusine genera Pella and Drusilla. This clade in turn formed a sister group to the remaining Athetini (referred to as the ‘main Athetini clade’), which also included the tribe Ecitocharini and the lomechusine genus Myrmedonota. The (Geostiba, Earota) clade was an unexpected discovery, but there is at least one tentative morphological synapomorphy for this clade: sensillum a of the epipharynx being reduced (Yosii & Sawada 1976: fig. 47B; Gusarov 2002b: fig. 2). This character state is thus a potential synapomorphy of the subtribe Geostibina. The lomechusine genus Myrmedonota formed a weakly supported clade with Meronera within the main Athetini clade. Although the type genus of Lomechusini was not included in Elven , they argued that based on morphology, it seemed more closely related to Pella and Drusilla than to Meronera and Myrmedonota. In this study, the name ‘true Lomechusini’ will refer to the clade that includes the type genus Lomechusa, while the other clade will be referred to as the ‘false Lomechusini’. Ecitophya, the only genus of Ecitocharini included in Elven , formed a well-supported clade with the New World genus Stethusa, a generalized non-myrmecophile athetine. The main goal of this study is to firmly resolve the phylogeny of the major lineages of the ALE clade discovered by Elven , to revise the tribe-level classification. With taxon sampling expanded in all three ALE tribes, the study aims to test the following hypotheses: (i) Geostibina are a sister clade to the ‘true Lomechusini’, the clade that includes Lomechusa; (ii) Geostibina and the ‘true Lomechusini’ form a sister group to the main Athetini clade; (iii) All athetine genera that have sensillum a of the epipharynx reduced belong to Geostibina; (iv) Several genera traditionally placed in Lomechusini are not members of the ‘true Lomechusini’ clade, but form a subclade (the ‘false Lomechusini’) within the main Athetini clade; and (v) Ecitocharini are monophyletic, nested within the main Athetini clade, and have Stethusa as their sister group.

Material and methods

Taxon sampling

Taxa used in this study are listed in Table 1. About half of the sequences were produced for this study, the remaining were taken from Elven . The taxa were chosen specifically to address the phylogenetic relationships between Athetini, Lomechusini and Ecitocharini, and to this end, we included a broad representation of the first two tribes. The study includes six athetine genera with reduced sensillum a of the epipharynx: Alevonota, Aloconota, Callicerus, Earota, Geostiba and Pelioptera. These genera were hypothesized to belong to a monophyletic Geostibina. We included the type species of the type genera of Athetini, Lomechusini and Geostibina, and the type species of many other genera including Alevonota, Aloconota, Callicerus, Drusilla, Earota and Meronera (indicated in Table 1). The large lomechusine genus Zyras is represented by at least three subgenera including the nominotypical subgenus, but not the type species. The tribe Ecitocharini is represented by two genera, but not the type genus.
Table 1

List of specimens used in this study

Species nameTribeDepository1ZMUN BarcodeCountry of originGenBank accession numbers
COI–Leu2–COII16S–Leu1–NADH118S
Subfamily Tachyporinae
Tachinus proximus Kraatz, 1855TachyporiniZMUN10002542NorwayGQ980859GQ980968GQ981067
Subfamily Aleocharinae (except the ALE clade tribes)
Aleochara moerens Gyllenhal, 1827 #1AleochariniZMUN10002579NorwayGQ980861GQ980970GQ981069
Aleochara moerens Gyllenhal, 1827 #2AleochariniZMUN10002570NorwayGQ980862GQ980971GQ981070
Tetrasticta sp. 1AleochariniZMUC10029285LaosJN581929JN581761JN581846
Tetrasticta sp. 2AleochariniZMUC10029284LaosJN581930JN581762JN581847
Cordalia obscura (Gravenhorst, 1802)FalagriiniZMUN10002651GreeceGQ980864GQ980973GQ981071
Myrmecopora uvida (Erichson, 1840) #1FalagriiniZMUN10030945GreeceJN581919JN581750JN581834
Myrmecopora uvida (Erichson, 1840) #2FalagriiniZMUN10029111GreeceJN581920JN581751JN581835
Gymnusa variegata Kiesenwetter, 1845GymnusiniZMUN10002641RomaniaGQ980860GQ980969GQ981068
Bolitochara pulchra (Gravenhorst, 1806) #1HomalotiniZMUN10002596NorwayGQ980866GQ980974GQ981073
Bolitochara pulchra (Gravenhorst, 1806) #2HomalotiniZMUN10002591NorwayGQ980865GQ981072
Gyrophaena congrua Erichson, 1837HomalotiniZMUN10002584NorwayGQ980867GQ980975GQ981074
Gyrophaena fasciata (Marsham, 1802) #1HomalotiniZMUN10002585NorwayGQ980868GQ980976GQ981075
Gyrophaena fasciata (Marsham, 1802) #2HomalotiniZMUN10002572NorwayGQ980869GQ980977GQ981076
Silusida marginella (Casey, 1893) #1HomalotiniZMUN10002625USAGQ980870GQ980978GQ981077
Silusida marginella (Casey, 1893) #2HomalotiniZMUN10002624USAGQ980871GQ980979GQ981078
••Hoplandria lateralis (Melsheimer, 1846)HoplandriiniZMUN10002550USAGQ980872GQ980980GQ981079
Myllaena audax Casey, 1911 #1MyllaeniniZMUN10030903USAJN581918JN581749JN581833
Myllaena audax Casey, 1911 #2MyllaeniniZMUN10002598USAGQ980881GQ981088
Halobrecta cf. halensis Mulsant & Rey, 1873OxypodiniZMUN10002647GreeceGQ980966GQ981065GQ981172
Oxypoda praecox Erichson, 1839OxypodiniZMUN10002637GermanyGQ980882GQ980989GQ981089
Thendelecrotona sp.Oxypodinini2ZMUN10002612South AfricaGQ980967GQ981066GQ981173
Placusa sp. prope tachyporoides (Waltl, 1838)PlacusiniZMUN10002541USAGQ980883GQ980990GQ981090
Tribe Athetini
Acrotona sp. prope assecla (Casey, 1910)AthetiniZMUN10002544USAGQ980884GQ980991GQ981091
Acrotona sp. prope austiniana (Casey, 1910) #1AthetiniZMUN10002543USAGQ980885GQ980992GQ981092
Acrotona sp. prope austiniana (Casey, 1910) #2AthetiniZMUN10002547USAGQ980886GQ980993GQ981093
Actocharina leptotyphloides (Bernhauer, 1907) #1AthetiniZMUN10002656AustriaJN581857JN581688JN581774
Actocharina leptotyphloides (Bernhauer, 1907) #2AthetiniZMUN10002657AustriaJN581858JN581689JN581775
Alevonota egregia (Rye, 1876) #1AthetiniZMUN10030889FranceJN581859JN581690
Alevonota egregia (Rye, 1876) #2AthetiniZMUN10030891FranceJN581860JN581691
Alevonota rufotestacea (Kraatz, 1856)AthetiniZMUN10030810FranceJN581861JN581692
Aloconota cambrica (Wollaston, 1855) #1AthetiniZMUN10030823AustriaJN581862JN581693JN581776
Aloconota cambrica (Wollaston, 1855) #2AthetiniZMUN10029295AustriaJN581863JN581694JN581777
Aloconota currax (Kraatz, 1856) #1AthetiniZMUN10029300AustriaJN581864JN581695JN581778
Aloconota currax (Kraatz, 1856) #2AthetiniZMUN10029301AustriaJN581865JN581696JN581779
Aloconota gregaria (Erichson, 1839)AthetiniZMUN10029294NorwayJN581866JN581697JN581780
Aloconota sp. #1AthetiniZMUN10030840UgandaJN581867JN581698JN581781
Aloconota sp. #2AthetiniZMUN10030746UgandaJN581868JN581782
Alpinia sp. prope alpicola (Miller, 1859) #1AthetiniZMUN10029305RomaniaJN581869JN581699JN581783
Alpinia sp. prope alpicola (Miller, 1859) #2AthetiniZMUN10002644RomaniaGQ980897GQ981104
Amidobia talpa (Heer, 1841)AthetiniZMUN10002646NorwayGQ980898GQ981002GQ981105
Amischa analis (Gravenhorst, 1802) #1AthetiniZMUN10029292NorwayJN581871JN581702JN581786
Amischa analis (Gravenhorst, 1802) #2AthetiniZMUN10002623NorwayGQ980895GQ981102
Amischa nigrofusca (Stephens, 1832) #1AthetiniZMUN10029304NorwayJN581872JN581703JN581787
Amischa nigrofusca (Stephens, 1832) #2AthetiniZMUN10002622NorwayGQ980896GQ981103
Atheta (Alaobia) gagatina (Baudi di Selve, 1848) #1AthetiniZMUN10002578NorwayGQ980901GQ981005GQ981108
Atheta (Alaobia) gagatina (Baudi di Selve, 1848) #2AthetiniZMUN10002580NorwayGQ980902GQ981006GQ981109
Atheta (Alaobia) membranata G. Benick, 1974AthetiniZMUN10002653FranceGQ980903GQ981007
Atheta (Alaobia) scapularis (C.R.Sahlberg, 1831) #1AthetiniZMUN10030796FranceJN581873JN581704
Atheta (Alaobia) scapularis (C.R.Sahlberg, 1831) #2AthetiniZMUN10030807FranceJN581874JN581705
Atheta (crassicornis-gr.) crassicornis (Fabricius, 1793)AthetiniZMUN10002640HungaryGQ980907GQ981011GQ981113
Atheta (crassicornis-gr.) modesta (Melsheimer, 1844) #1AthetiniZMUN10002621USAGQ980908GQ981012GQ981114
Atheta (crassicornis-gr.) modesta (Melsheimer, 1844) #2AthetiniZMUN10002620USAGQ980909GQ981013GQ981115
Atheta (Datomicra) celata (Erichson, 1837) #1AthetiniZMUN10002560NorwayGQ980910GQ981014GQ981116
Atheta (Datomicra) celata (Erichson, 1837) #2AthetiniZMUN10002556NorwayGQ980911GQ981015GQ981117
Atheta (Datomicra) dadopora (Thomson, 1867)AthetiniZMUN10002554USAGQ980912GQ981016GQ981118
Atheta (Dimetrota) aeneipennis (Thomson, 1856)AthetiniZMUN10002583NorwayGQ980913GQ981017GQ981119
Atheta (Dimetrota) cinnamoptera (Thomson, 1856)AthetiniZMUN10002582NorwayGQ980914GQ981018GQ981120
Atheta (Dimetrota) setigera (Sharp, 1869)AthetiniZMUN10002639RomaniaGQ980917GQ981021GQ981123
Atheta (Dralica) vilis (Erichson, 1837) #1AthetiniZMUN10029114BelarusJN581875JN581706JN581788
Atheta (Dralica) vilis (Erichson, 1837) #2AthetiniZMUN10002666BelarusJN581876JN581707JN581789
Atheta (Mycetota) laticollis (Stephens, 1832)AthetiniZMUN10002606NorwayGQ980920GQ981024GQ981126
Atheta (Mycetota) pasadenae Bernhauer, 1906AthetiniZMUN10002642FranceGQ980921GQ981025GQ981127
Atheta (Oreostiba) bosnica Ganglbauer, 1895AthetiniZMUN10002638RomaniaGQ980922GQ981026GQ981128
Atheta (Oxypodera) kenyamontis Pace, 1986AthetiniZMUN10002586KenyaGQ980923GQ981027GQ981129
Atheta (Parameotica) laticeps (Thomson, 1856) #1AthetiniZMUN10029115BelarusJN581925JN581755JN581840
Atheta (Parameotica) laticeps (Thomson, 1856) #2AthetiniZMUN10029116BelarusJN581926JN581756JN581841
Atheta (ravilla-gr.) ravilla (Erichson, 1839) #1AthetiniZMUN10002548NorwayGQ980924GQ981028GQ981130
Atheta (ravilla-gr.) ravilla (Erichson, 1839) #2AthetiniZMUN10002557NorwayGQ980925GQ981029GQ981131
Atheta (s. str.) contristata (Kraatz, 1856)AthetiniZMUN10002635RomaniaGQ980926GQ981030GQ981132
••Atheta (s. str.) graminicola (Gravenhorst, 1806) #1AthetiniZMUN10002561NorwayGQ980927GQ981031GQ981133
••Atheta (s. str.) graminicola (Gravenhorst, 1806) #2AthetiniZMUN10002562NorwayGQ980928GQ981032GQ981134
Atheta (Thinobaena) vestita (Gravenhorst, 1806)AthetiniZMUN10002613NorwayGQ980929GQ981033GQ981135
Atheta (vaga-gr.) vaga (Heer, 1839)AthetiniZMUN10002655FranceGQ980930GQ981034
Atheta sp. ex gr. lippaAthetiniZMUN10002564USAGQ980918GQ981022GQ981124
Boreophilia hyperborea (Brundin, 1940)AthetiniZMUN10002634RussiaGQ980933GQ981037GQ981138
Boreostiba sp.AthetiniZMUN10002633RussiaGQ980934GQ981038GQ981139
Brundinia meridionalis (Mulsant & Rey, 1853)AthetiniZMUN10002667UkraineJN581877JN581708JN581790
Callicerus obscurus Gravenhorst, 1802 #1AthetiniZMUN10030905DenmarkJN581878JN581709JN581791
Callicerus obscurus Gravenhorst, 1802 #2AthetiniZMUN10030800DenmarkJN581879JN581710JN581792
Dadobia immersa (Erichson, 1837)AthetiniZMUN10002630NorwayGQ980953GQ981055GQ981159
Dalotia coriaria (Kraatz, 1856)AthetiniZMUN10002643FranceGQ981039GQ981140
Discerota torrentum (Kiesenwetter, 1850) #1AthetiniZMUN10029112FranceJN581880JN581711JN581793
Discerota torrentum (Kiesenwetter, 1850) #2AthetiniZMUN10029113FranceJN581881JN581712JN581794
Earota dentata (Bernhauer, 1906)AthetiniZMUN10002539USAGQ980965GQ981064GQ981171
Earota reyi (Kiesenwetter, 1850) #1AthetiniZMUN10029306FranceJN581888JN581718JN581799
Earota reyi (Kiesenwetter, 1850) #2AthetiniZMUN10029307FranceJN581889JN581719JN581800
Geostiba (s. str.) circellaris (Gravenhorst, 1806)AthetiniZMUN10002587NorwayGQ980954GQ981056GQ981160
Geostiba (Sibiota) bicarinata Lohse & Smetana, 1988 #1AthetiniZMUN10030875USAJN581895JN581725JN581807
Geostiba (Sibiota) bicarinata Lohse & Smetana, 1988 #2AthetiniZMUN10030948USAJN581896JN581726JN581808
Geostiba (Sibiota) nubigena Lohse & Smetana, 1988 #1AthetiniZMUN10030888USAJN581897JN581727JN581809
Geostiba (Sibiota) nubigena Lohse & Smetana, 1988 #2AthetiniZMUN10030736USAJN581898JN581728JN581810
Hydrosmecta eximia (Sharp, 1869) #1AthetiniZMUN10002661AustriaJN581899JN581729JN581811
Hydrosmecta eximia (Sharp, 1869) #2AthetiniZMUN10002659AustriaJN581900JN581730JN581812
Hydrosmecta gracilicornis (Erichson, 1839)AthetiniZMUN10002658AustriaJN581901JN581731JN581813
Hydrosmecta valdieriana (Scheerpeltz, 1944) #1AthetiniZMUN10002662AustriaJN581903JN581733JN581815
Hydrosmecta valdieriana (Scheerpeltz, 1944) #2AthetiniZMUN10002663AustriaJN581904JN581734JN581816
Hydrosmecta sp. 1AthetiniZMUN10002650USAGQ980955GQ981057GQ981161
Hydrosmecta sp. 2AthetiniZMUN10002660AustriaJN581902JN581732JN581814
Liogluta microptera Thomson, 1867 #1AthetiniZMUN10002600Czech RepublicGQ980937GQ981041GQ981143
Liogluta microptera Thomson, 1867 #2AthetiniZMUN10002602Czech RepublicGQ980936GQ981142
Liogluta nigropolita (Bernhauer, 1907)AthetiniZMUN10002636RussiaGQ980938GQ981144
Lypoglossa lateralis (Mannerheim, 1830)AthetiniZMUN10002632RussiaGQ980887GQ980994GQ981094
Lyprocorrhe anceps (Erichson, 1837)AthetiniZMUN10002649NorwayGQ980939GQ981042GQ981145
Meronera venustula (Erichson, 1839)Athetini3ZMUN10002576USAGQ980875GQ980983GQ981082
Mocyta fungi (Gravenhorst, 1806) #1AthetiniZMUN10002588GermanyGQ980888GQ980995GQ981095
Mocyta fungi (Gravenhorst, 1806) #2AthetiniZMUN10002589GermanyGQ980889GQ980996GQ981096
Mocyta scopula (Casey, 1893) #1AthetiniZMUN10002540USAGQ980890GQ980997GQ981097
Mocyta scopula (Casey, 1893) #2AthetiniZMUN10002559USAGQ980891GQ980998GQ981098
Pelioptera sp. prope micans (Kraatz, 1857)AthetiniZMUC10030959LaosJN581758JN581843
Philhygra debilis (Erichson, 1837) #1AthetiniZMUN10002607NorwayGQ980941GQ981044GQ981147
Philhygra debilis (Erichson, 1837) #2AthetiniZMUN10002608NorwayGQ980942GQ981045GQ981148
Philhygra fallaciosa (Sharp, 1869) #1AthetiniZMUN10002610Czech RepublicGQ980943GQ981046GQ981149
Philhygra fallaciosa (Sharp, 1869) #2AthetiniZMUN10002609Czech RepublicGQ980944GQ981047GQ981150
Philhygra iterans (Casey, 1910) #1AthetiniZMUN10002595USAGQ980945GQ981048GQ981151
Philhygra iterans (Casey, 1910) #2AthetiniZMUN10002594USAGQ980946GQ981049GQ981152
Pontomalota opaca (LeConte, 1863) #1AthetiniZMUN10002577USAGQ980956GQ981058GQ981162
Pontomalota opaca (LeConte, 1863) #2AthetiniZMUN10002574USAGQ980957GQ981059GQ981163
Stethusa dichroa (Gravenhorst, 1802) #1AthetiniZMUN10002567USAGQ980948GQ981051GQ981154
Stethusa dichroa (Gravenhorst, 1802) #2AthetiniZMUN10002568USAGQ980949GQ981052GQ981155
Stethusa spuriella (Casey, 1910) #1AthetiniZMUN10002599USAGQ980950GQ981053GQ981156
Stethusa spuriella (Casey, 1910) #2AthetiniZMUN10002628USAGQ980951GQ981054GQ981157
Strigota ambigua (Erichson, 1839) #1AthetiniZMUN10002571USAGQ980893GQ981000GQ981100
Strigota ambigua (Erichson, 1839) #2AthetiniZMUN10002575USAGQ980894GQ981001GQ981101
Tarphiota fucicola (Mäklin in Mannerheim, 1852)AthetiniZMUN10002593USAGQ980958GQ981060GQ981164
Tribe Ecitocharini
Ecitomorpha sp.EcitochariniZMUN10002689PeruJN581892JN581722JN581803
Ecitophya gracillima Mann, 1925 #1EcitochariniZMUN10002592PeruGQ980863GQ980972JN581804
Ecitophya gracillima Mann, 1925 #2EcitochariniZMUN10029164PeruJN581893JN581723JN581805
Tribe Lomechusini
Amaurodera yaoana Pace, 1992 #1LomechusiniZMUC10030878LaosJN581870JN581700JN581784
Amaurodera yaoana Pace, 1992 #2LomechusiniZMUC10030812LaosJN581701JN581785
Drusilla canaliculata (Fabricius, 1787) #1LomechusiniZMUN10002604NorwayGQ980873GQ980981GQ981080
Drusilla canaliculata (Fabricius, 1787) #2LomechusiniZMUN10002601NorwayGQ980874GQ980982GQ981081
Drusilla sp. 1 #1LomechusiniZMUN10051252ThailandJN581882JN581713
Drusilla sp. 1 #2LomechusiniZMUN10051251ThailandJN581883JN581714
Drusilla sp. 2 #1LomechusiniZMUC10051193LaosJN581884JN581715JN581795
Drusilla sp. 2 #2LomechusiniZMUC10051194LaosJN581885JN581716JN581796
Drusilla sp. prope khamhengi Pace, 1984 #1LomechusiniZMUC10051166LaosJN581886JN581717JN581797
Drusilla sp. prope khamhengi Pace, 1984 #2LomechusiniZMUC10051165LaosJN581887JN581798
Ecitodonia sp. #1LomechusiniZMUN10029249EcuadorJN581890JN581720JN581801
Ecitodonia sp. #2LomechusiniZMUN10029248EcuadorJN581891JN581721JN581802
Ecitopora sp.LomechusiniZMUN10029251EcuadorJN581894JN581724JN581806
••Lomechusa emarginata (Paykull, 1789) #1LomechusiniZMUN10030941NorwayJN581905JN581735JN581817
••Lomechusa emarginata (Paykull, 1789) #2LomechusiniZMUN10030947NorwayJN581906JN581736JN581818
Lomechusa pubicollis Brisout de Barneville, 1860LomechusiniZMUN10030917GermanyJN581907JN581737JN581819
Lomechusini genus 1LomechusiniZMUN10029159EcuadorJN581908JN581738JN581820
Lomechusini genus 2 #1LomechusiniZMUN10002685EcuadorJN581909JN581739JN581821
Lomechusini genus 2 #2LomechusiniZMUN10029161EcuadorJN581910JN581822
Lomechusini genus 3 #1LomechusiniZMUN10029252EcuadorJN581740JN581823
Lomechusini genus 3 #2LomechusiniZMUN10029253EcuadorJN581741JN581824
Lomechusini genus 4 #1LomechusiniZMUN10029256EcuadorJN581911JN581742JN581825
Lomechusini genus 4 #2LomechusiniZMUN10029254EcuadorJN581912JN581826
Lomechusini genus 5 #1LomechusiniZMUN10029258EcuadorJN581913JN581743JN581827
Lomechusini genus 5 #2LomechusiniZMUN10029257EcuadorJN581914JN581744JN581828
Lomechusini genus 6LomechusiniZMUN10029279EcuadorJN581915JN581745JN581829
Lomechusini genus 7 #1LomechusiniZMUN10029280EcuadorJN581916JN581746JN581830
Lomechusini genus 7 #2LomechusiniZMUN10029282EcuadorJN581747JN581831
Lomechusoides amurensis (Wasmann, 1897)LomechusiniZMUN10030868RussiaJN581917JN581748JN581832
Myrmedonota sp. #1LomechusiniZMUN10002615USAGQ980876GQ980984GQ981083
Myrmedonota sp. #2LomechusiniZMUN10002614USAGQ980877GQ980985GQ981084
Orphnebius (Mesocephalobius) sp. 1LomechusiniZMUC10051237LaosJN581921JN581752JN581836
Orphnebius (Mesocephalobius) sp. 2LomechusiniZMUC10051236LaosJN581922JN581753JN581837
Orphnebius (Mesocephalobius) sp. 3LomechusiniZMUN10051239ThailandJN581923JN581838
Orphnebius (Mesocephalobius) sp. 4LomechusiniZMUN10051238ThailandJN581924JN581754JN581839
Pedinopleurus sp.LomechusiniZMUN10051235ThailandJN581927JN581757JN581842
Pella caliginosa (Casey, 1893) #1LomechusiniZMUN10002617USAGQ980878GQ980986GQ981085
Pella caliginosa (Casey, 1893) #2LomechusiniZMUN10002616USAGQ980879GQ980987GQ981086
Pella humeralis (Gravenhorst, 1802)LomechusiniZMUN10002569NorwayGQ980880GQ980988GQ981087
Tetradonia sp. 1LomechusiniZMUN10029163EcuadorJN581759JN581844
Tetradonia sp. 2LomechusiniZMUN10029160EcuadorJN581928JN581760JN581845
Zyras (Glossacantha) perdecoratus Pace, 2005 #1LomechusiniZMUN10051274ThailandJN581932JN581764JN581849
Zyras (Glossacantha) perdecoratus Pace, 2005 #2LomechusiniZMUN10051273ThailandJN581933JN581765JN581850
Zyras (Glossacantha) sp. 3 #1LomechusiniZMUN10051280ThailandJN581938JN581770JN581853
Zyras (Glossacantha) sp. 3 #2LomechusiniZMUN10051279ThailandJN581939JN581771JN581854
Zyras (Glossacantha) sp. prope perdecoratus Pace, 2005 #1LomechusiniZMUN10051276ThailandJN581940JN581772JN581855
Zyras (Glossacantha) sp. prope perdecoratus Pace, 2005 #2LomechusiniZMUN10051275ThailandJN581941JN581773JN581856
Zyras (Rhynchodonia) sp. 2 #1LomechusiniZMUC10051233LaosJN581936JN581768JN581851
Zyras (Rhynchodonia) sp. 2 #2LomechusiniZMUC10051234LaosJN581937JN581769JN581852
Zyras (s. str.) collaris (Paykull, 1800)LomechusiniZMUN10002669AbkhasiaJN581931JN581763JN581848
Zyras sp. 1 #1LomechusiniZMUN10030963ThailandJN581934JN581766
Zyras sp. 1 #2LomechusiniZMUN10030758ThailandJN581935JN581767

Type species are marked with a bullet (), or two bullets (••) if the respective genus is the type of its tribe. Additional label information is provided in Table S1.

1) The specimens listed as deposited at ZMUC will be divided between ZMUC and ZMUN.

2) Thendelecrotona was moved from Athetini to Aleocharinae incertae sedis in Elven , but based on its similarity to the Malagasy genus Oxypodinus, we now treat it as a member of Oxypodinini.

3) Meronera is listed under Athetini where it was placed by Elven . The remaining members of the ‘false Lomechusini’ are listed under Lomechusini.

List of specimens used in this study Type species are marked with a bullet (), or two bullets (••) if the respective genus is the type of its tribe. Additional label information is provided in Table S1. 1) The specimens listed as deposited at ZMUC will be divided between ZMUC and ZMUN. 2) Thendelecrotona was moved from Athetini to Aleocharinae incertae sedis in Elven , but based on its similarity to the Malagasy genus Oxypodinus, we now treat it as a member of Oxypodinini. 3) Meronera is listed under Athetini where it was placed by Elven . The remaining members of the ‘false Lomechusini’ are listed under Lomechusini. The tribes Lomechusini and Athetini both have global distributions. The Lomechusini in our data set have a good geographic coverage and include species from the Palaearctic, Nearctic, Neotropical and Oriental regions. The Athetini are mainly represented by Palaearctic and Nearctic species but also include one Oriental and two African species. Whenever possible, two specimens of each species were sequenced as additional control for misidentifications. The total data set included 180 samples representing 120 species, of which 68 belong to Athetini, 33 to Lomechusini, 2 to Ecitocharini and 16 to nine other aleocharine tribes used as outgroup. Tachinus proximus from the subfamily Tachyporinae was included as a more distant outgroup taxon. There was one taxonomic change for the sequences taken from Elven : the genus Thendelecrotona is here recognized to be a member of the tribe Oxypodinini, based on its similarity to the Malagasy genus Oxypodinus in both external characters and the male genitalia. For most of the Palaearctic and Nearctic specimens, identification to species level was straightforward. For samples from the tropical regions, identification to species level was often impossible and many samples were identified only to genus level. Seven Neotropical species (12 specimens) could not even be assigned to genera, and their initial tribal placement in Lomechusini is based on an assessment of tribal characters, including tarsal formula 4-5-5, mesocoxae relatively broadly separated and mesoventral process short and broad. Most specimens were collected directly into >96% ethanol and stored at −20 °C prior to processing, but some trap material that had been exposed to high (+20 to +40 °C) temperatures and/or dilution by rain was also included. All specimens used for DNA extraction are labelled as vouchers and deposited at the Natural History Museum, University of Oslo (ZMUN) or the Zoological Museum, Natural History Museum of Denmark (ZMUC). Label information is provided in Table S1.

Molecular markers

Nucleotide sequences from one nuclear and two mitochondrial regions were targeted. The first mitochondrial region covered most of the cytochrome oxidase 1 and 2 (COI and COII) and the tRNA-Leucine 2 (Leu2) genes. The second mitochondrial region covered the 3′-end of the large ribosomal subunit (16S), the tRNA-Leucine 1 (Leu1) and a small part of the NADH dehydrogenase subunit 1 (NADH1) genes. The nuclear region covered an internal part of the small ribosomal subunit (18S) gene. These markers were used by Elven and have proved suitable for the study of athetine phylogeny.

DNA extraction, amplification and sequencing

DNA was extracted from the head and prothorax using the Qiagen DNeasy Blood and Tissue Kit (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) following the manufacturer’s protocol for animal tissue. For the very small specimens of Actocharina, the whole body was used. DNA extraction was performed on vacuum-dried samples without prior homogenization. Samples were incubated in lysis buffer for 20–30 h. After extraction, the exoskeletons were retrieved for dry mounting with the rest of the voucher. The targeted regions were amplified using the primers listed in Table S2. The mitochondrial COILeu2COII region was amplified in three overlapping fragments, while the mitochondrial 16S–Leu1NADH1 region and the nuclear 18S region were each amplified in single fragments. PCRs were set-up in a 25-μL reaction volume containing 2.5 mm MgCl2 (Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA, USA), 1 × ABI GeneAmp PCR buffer (Applied Biosystems), 0.8 mm GeneAmp dNTPs (Applied Biosystems), 0.5 μm of each primer (MWG-Biotech AG, Ebersberg, Germany), 1 U ABI AmpliTaq DNA Polymerase (Applied Biosystems) and 3 μL template DNA extract. Most reactions also included 1.1 mg dimethyl sulfoxide (Merck, Darmstadt, Germany) to improve PCR performance. When amplifying the 16S–Leu1NADH1 region, the PCR set-up was adjusted to 2 mm MgCl2, 0.96 × PCR buffer, 0.64 mm dNTPs and 0.4 μm of each primer. The amplification profile consisted of an initial denaturation step of 94 °C for 30 s, followed by 30 cycles of 94 °C for 1 min, annealing temperature Ta for 30 s and 72 °C for 2 min, and finally a 10 min extension step at 72 °C. The annealing temperatures are listed in Table S2. For some difficult samples, PCR performance was improved by replacing dimethyl sulfoxide in the reaction mix with 0.4 μg bovine serum albumin (Sigma-Aldrich, Steinheim, Germany), by using alternative primers (listed in Table S2), by lowering the annealing temperature or by using an alternative PCR protocol employing HotStar Taq DNA Polymerase (Qiagen). PCR products were purified using ExoSAP-IT (USB Corporation, Cleveland, Ohio, USA). If secondary products were detected on a standard agarose gel, the PCR product of appropriate size was cut out from 1% agarose gel and purified using the MN NucleoSpin Extract II gel extraction kit (Macherey-Nagel, Düren, Germany). Purified PCR products were sequenced in both directions using the terminal primers with the ABI BigDye Terminator Cycle Sequencing Kit v3.1 (Applied Biosystems) and analysed on the ABI 3730 DNA Analyzer (Applied Biosystems). All DNA sequencing was outsourced to the ABI-lab, Departments of Biology and of Molecular Biosciences, University of Oslo.

Sequence alignment and model selection

Alignment of the protein-coding genes was straightforward, as there were virtually no indels. For the RNA-coding genes, published secondary structures from other insect groups were used as a guide for manual alignment in MEGA 4 (Tamura ). Secondary structures for Apis mellifera (Gillespie ) were used to aid alignment of 16S and 18S, while secondary structures for Xenos vesparum (Carapelli ) were used to aid alignment of Leu1 and Leu2. Loop regions that could not be aligned unambiguously were excluded from the subsequent analyses. The concatenated alignment was partitioned by codon positions, stems vs. loops, and genomic origin (mitochondrial vs. nuclear) to produce a total of seven partitions (for details, see Elven ). MrModelTest 2.3. (Nylander 2004) was used to determine a suitable evolutionary model for each partition under the Akaike information criterion.

Phylogenetic analyses

The partitioned data set was analysed under maximum likelihood (ML) and Bayesian inference. Two analyses were performed with each method; one with all sequences included and one where sequences with more than 20% missing information were excluded (i.e. those lacking data for one of the three targeted regions). ML analyses were performed in RAxML 7.0.3 (Stamatakis 2006) using the Rapid Bootstrap algorithm (Stamatakis ) followed by ML optimization. Each analysis was performed with 1000 bootstrap replicates, and every fifth bootstrap tree was used as a starting point for subsequent ML optimization on the original data set. The partitioned data set was analysed using the GTRMIX option (CAT approximation for the bootstrap, followed by final ML optimization under the GTR+Г model). ML optimization was also performed on 100 randomized parsimony trees to test whether this would yield a higher final likelihood score. The tree with the overall highest score was selected as the best tree, and bootstrap values were drawn on this tree. Prior to the analysis, the rearrangement settings and number of rate categories were optimized following the author’s recommendations (RAxML 7.0.4 Manual). Two alternative rearrangement settings (i = auto vs. i = 10) were compared by performing ML optimization on 10 randomized parsimony trees with each setting, and choosing the setting resulting in the highest likelihood score for the optimized trees. Four alternative numbers of rate categories (10, 25, 40 and 55) were then compared in the same way using the best rearrangement setting from above. The same 10 starting trees were used for all comparisons. Based on the results of these comparisons, the analysis that included incomplete sequences was performed using i = auto, while the analysis using only complete sequences was performed using i = 10. Both analyses were performed using 25 rate categories. Bayesian analyses were performed in MrBayes v3.1.2 (Ronquist & Huelsenbeck 2003) using the GTR+Г model for 3rd codon positions and GTR+I+Г for the other partitions. MrModelTest suggested GTR+I+Г for all partitions, but under this modelling regime, the runs did not converge. Closer inspection of the model parameters showed that several 3rd codon position parameters stabilized at different values in different runs and that the difference was most pronounced for the pinvar (I) and gamma (Г) parameters. When gamma alone was used to account for rate heterogeneity in this partition, the runs converged. The 3rd codon positions contained very few (2.1%) invariable sites, and there may have been insufficient data for estimating the pinvar parameter properly. All model parameters were unlinked across partitions and were allowed to evolve during the run starting from flat priors. All analyses were performed with four independent runs, each with three heated and one cold chain. Preliminary runs revealed poor mixing for the rate multiplier parameter under the default tuning parameter value of 500, and the value was therefore increased to 8000 (less bold proposals). The analyses were run for 100 million generations with sampling every 10 000 generations. Convergence was assessed by examining the average standard deviation of split frequencies between the four runs, the potential scale reduction factor for each model parameter and the mixing behaviour of the model parameters. The average standard deviation of split frequencies was calculated using a custom C++ program, SplitFreqs, which is available from the first author upon request. Model parameters and likelihood values were inspected in Tracer (Rambaut & Drummond 2007). The posterior tree distribution was summarized in a majority-rule consensus tree after discarding the first 25% of the samples as burn-in. The analyses were run at the Bioportal computer facility (http://www.bioportal.uio.no) at the University of Oslo, Norway.

Results

Sequence alignment

The concatenated sequence alignment of 180 samples included 3786 positions after trimming. Complete sequence information was obtained for 150 samples, while 30 lacked sequence data for one of the three target regions (Table 1). Because of alignment ambiguity, 284 positions were excluded from all phylogenetic analyses. Table S3 lists the number of parsimony informative, uninformative, invariant and excluded sites for each target gene. The alignment and partition definitions are included as a nexus file in the Supporting information (Data S1). The majority-rule consensus trees from the Bayesian analyses are shown in Figs 1 (complete sequences only) and 2 (incomplete sequences included). The trees with the highest likelihood score from the ML analyses are shown in Figs S1 (complete sequences only) and S2 (incomplete sequences included). In both ML analyses, the highest-scoring trees were found by using bootstrap trees rather than randomized parsimony trees as the starting points for ML optimization.
Figure 1

Majority-rule consensus tree from the Bayesian analysis with incomplete sequences excluded. Posterior probabilities are indicated under the branches. The labels of conspecific specimens have been combined to save space.

Figure 2

Majority-rule consensus tree from the Bayesian analysis with incomplete sequences included. Posterior probabilities are indicated under the branches. The labels of conspecific specimens have been combined to save space, except where the specimens did not group together. Complete sequences are indicated with open circles, incomplete with solid circles. Half-solid circles indicate pairs of conspecific specimens with one having incomplete sequence.

Majority-rule consensus tree from the Bayesian analysis with incomplete sequences excluded. Posterior probabilities are indicated under the branches. The labels of conspecific specimens have been combined to save space. Majority-rule consensus tree from the Bayesian analysis with incomplete sequences included. Posterior probabilities are indicated under the branches. The labels of conspecific specimens have been combined to save space, except where the specimens did not group together. Complete sequences are indicated with open circles, incomplete with solid circles. Half-solid circles indicate pairs of conspecific specimens with one having incomplete sequence. In both Bayesian analyses, the average standard deviation of split frequencies stabilized between 0.01 and 0.05 after about 20 million generations, indicating that stationarity was reached after about 5 million generations. The final standard deviation values after 100 million generations were 0.011 when incomplete sequences were excluded and 0.032 when they were included. The potential scale reduction factor approached 1 for all model parameters, never exceeding 1.009. Most model parameters showed good mixing, but the substitution rates and base frequencies for unpaired mitochondrial sites showed bimodal sampling when incomplete sequences were excluded. The chains swapped frequently between the two distinct optima, and both were thoroughly sampled during the run. The rate multiplier parameters showed alternating periods of good and poor mixing when the proposals tuning parameter value was adjusted to 8000, in contrast to uniformly poor mixing under the default value of 500. The Bayesian and ML analyses produced largely congruent phylogenies (Figs 1, 2, S1 and S2) with very similar relative branch lengths, although the total inferred tree length was somewhat higher (up to 23%) under Bayesian inference. Many nodes were recovered with high statistical support both under ML and Bayesian inference. All trees contained some exceptionally long branches, particularly among the Lomechusini. The ALE clade was recovered with high statistical support in all analyses (Bayesian posterior probability (PP) = 1.00, ML bootstrap support (BS) = 87%). When incomplete sequences were excluded (Figs 1 and S1), the Geostibina clade, represented by Aloconota, Callicerus, Earota and Geostiba, formed a sister group to the ‘true Lomechusini’ clade, which included Amaurodera, Drusilla, Lomechusa, Lomechusoides, Orphnebius, Pedinopleurus, Pella and Zyras. The Geostibina clade, the ‘true Lomechusini’ clade and the sister group relationship between them all received high statistical support (PP = 1.00, BS > 95%). In turn, the (Geostibina, ‘true Lomechusini’) clade formed a sister group to the main Athetini clade (PP = 1.00, BS = 83%), which included Ecitocharini and the ‘false Lomechusini’. The ‘false Lomechusini’ clade, consisting of Ecitodonia, Ecitopora, Meronera, Myrmedonota, Tetradonia and several not yet identified Neotropical taxa, was well supported in the Bayesian analysis (PP = 0.99) but not in the ML analysis (BS < 50%). The Ecitocharini, represented by two genera, were recovered as monophyletic (PP = 1.00, BS = 100%) and had Stethusa as its sister group (PP = 1.00, BS = 93%). The inclusion of 30 incomplete sequences had little impact on the overall tree topology (Figs 2 and S2). Of the well-supported relationships, only the (Stethusa, Ecitocharini) clade was not recovered when incomplete sequences were included; Stethusa and Ecitocharini instead formed separate clades with poorly supported or unresolved relationships to other athetine clades. Also, the ‘false Lomechusini’ were not recovered as monophyletic when incomplete sequences were included. All five genera included in the Geostibina clade have sensillum a of the epipharynx reduced. Among the other genera included in our study, only Pelioptera shares this character state. When examining the microscope slides of the entomological collection of the Natural History Museum, Oslo, as well as published illustrations of athetine genera, we identified additional genera (not included in our phylogenies) that have sensillum a of the epipharynx reduced. Table 2 lists taxa in which the presence of reduced sensillum a has been confirmed. In total, 13 genera were confirmed to share this character state. For nine of these, the type species was examined. Six other athetine genera that resemble Geostiba in having the ligula fully bilobed were found to have sensillum a fully developed (i.e. much longer than wide): Boreophilia (slide preparation examined), Liogluta (see Yosii & Sawada 1976: fig. 40B), Madeirostiba (see Assing & Wunderle 1995: fig. 5), Ousipalia (slide preparation examined), Saphocallus (see Assing 2001: fig. 16a), Schistoglossa (slide preparation examined) and Tomoglossa (see Sawada 1977: fig. 9c).
Table 2

Genera and species confirmed to belong to the tribe Geostibini based on the presence of reduced sensillum a of the epipharynx. Type species are indicated in bold

GenusSpeciesExamined material/publications
Alevonota Gravenhorst, 1802A. gracilenta (Erichson, 1839)ZMUN slide collection
Aloconota Thomson, 1858A. brunneipes (Casey, 1906)ZMUN slide collection
A. bulbosa Sawada, 1989Sawada (1989a): fig. 12b
A. cuspidata (Sawada, 1971)Sawada (1971): fig. 2c (as Tomoglossa)
A. gregaria (Erichson, 1839)Yosii & Sawada (1976): fig. 43b
A. insecta (Thomson, 1856)Yosii & Sawada (1976): fig. 44b
A. languida (Erichson, 1839)Sawada (1984): fig. 3b (as Disopora)
A. pfefferi (Roubal, 1929)ZMUN slide collection
A. punctifoveata (Sawada, 1970)Sawada (1970): fig. 8c (as Tomoglossa)
A. sulcifrons (Stephens, 1832)ZMUN slide collection
Callicerus Gravenhorst, 1802C. obscurus Gravenhorst, 1802Yosii & Sawada (1976): fig. 46b Assing (2001): fig. 2b
C. rigidicornis (Erichson, 1839)Assing (2001): fig. 14a
Chinecallicerus Assing, 2004C. laevigatus Assing, 2006Assing (2006): fig. 4
Earota Mulsant & Rey, 1874E. dentata (Bernhauer, 1906)Gusarov (2002b): fig. 2
Enalodroma Thomson, 1859E. hepatica (Erichson, 1839)Sawada (1984): fig. 4b (as Aloconota)
Geostiba Thomson, 1858G. alticola Lohse & Smetana, 1988ZMUN slide collection
G. appalachigena Gusarov, 2002ZMUN slide collection
G. balsamensis Pace, 1997ZMUN slide collection
G. bicarinata Lohse & Smetana, 1988ZMUN slide collection
G. carteriensis Pace, 1997Gusarov (2002a): fig. 4
G. circellaris (Gravenhorst, 1806)Yosii & Sawada (1976): fig. 47b Gusarov (2002a): fig. 2
G. crepusculigena Gusarov, 2002ZMUN slide collection
G. daisetsuana Sawada, 1989Sawada (1989b): fig. 3b
G. flava (Kraatz, 1856)ZMUN slide collection
G. graveyardensis Pace, 1997ZMUN slide collection
G. infirma (Weise, 1878)ZMUN slide collection
G. nebuligena Gusarov, 2002ZMUN slide collection
G. pluvigena Gusarov, 2002ZMUN slide collection
G. sakhalinensis Pace, 1997ZMUN slide collection
G. winkleri (Bernhauer, 1915)ZMUN slide collection
Homoiocalea Bernhauer, 1943H. toroenensis (Bernhauer, 1943)Sawada (1984): fig. 1b (as Callicerus)
Micrearota Casey, 1910M. prolongata (Casey, 1910)ZMUN slide collection
Pelioptera Kraatz, 1857P. acuticollis (Kraatz, 1859)Sawada (1982): fig. 10b
P. babai Sawada, 1989Sawada (1989a): fig. 13b
P. exasperata (Kraatz, 1859)Sawada (1982): fig. 11b
P. flavonitescens (Bernhauer, 1938)Sawada (1977): fig. 17k (as Geostiba)
P. luzonica (Bernhauer, 1916)Sawada (1980): fig. 16b
P. micans (Kraatz, 1857)Sawada (1980): fig. 9b
P. monticola Cameron, 1933Sawada (1980): fig. 15b
P. nilgiriensis (Fauvel, 1904)Sawada (1980): fig. 11b
P. opaca (Kraatz, 1857)Sawada (1980): fig. 10b
P. ocyamensis (Bernhauer, 1914)Sawada (1977): fig. 17b (as Geostiba)
P. peguana (Bernhauer, 1915)Sawada (1980): fig. 14b
P. purpurascens (Cameron, 1920)Sawada (1987): fig. 5b
P. testaceipennis (Motschulsky, 1858)Sawada (1977): fig. 18b (as Geostiba luchuensis (Cameron, 1933) Sawada (1980): fig. 13b
P. vacillator (Cameron, 1933)Sawada (1977): fig. 19b (as Geostiba)
P. xylophila (Cameron, 1920)Sawada (1980): fig. 12b
Pseudosemiris Machulka, 1935P. kaufmanni (Eppelsheim, 1887)Assing (2001): fig. 19a
Seeversiella Ashe, 1986S. globicollis (Bernhauer, 1907)Gusarov (2003): fig. 2
Tropimenelytron Pace, 1983T. americanum Gusarov, 2002ZMUN slide collection
T. tuberiventre (Eppelsheim in Leder, 1879)Gusarov (2002c): fig. 2
T. unicum (Bernhauer, 1907)Sawada (1977): fig. 15b (as Aloconota)
Genera and species confirmed to belong to the tribe Geostibini based on the presence of reduced sensillum a of the epipharynx. Type species are indicated in bold

Discussion

The molecular phylogeny of the AthetiniLomechusini–Ecitocharini (ALE) clade of aleocharine rove beetles presented in this study is in line with the main finding of Elven . The monophyly of the ALE clade as well as the three major clades within it, the Geostibina, the ‘true Lomechusini’, and the main Athetini clade, was confirmed with high statistical support. All non-geostibine Athetini except Discerota torrentum were recovered as part of the main Athetini clade, which also included Ecitocharini and the ‘false Lomechusini’. Of the five initial hypotheses to be tested in this study, none was rejected. There was a strong statistical support for all hypothesized relationships except the monophyly of the ‘false Lomechusini’ (hypothesis 4), for which there was only moderate support. The five hypotheses are reviewed below. H1: Geostibina are a sister clade to the ‘true Lomechusini’. The Geostibina clade and the ‘true Lomechusini’ clade were both strongly supported, and the sister group relationship between them strongly corroborated. Within the Geostibina clade, the monophyly of Earota (two species) and Aloconota (four species) was confirmed, but the monophyly of Geostiba (three species) and Alevonota (two species) was not. The inclusion of Callicerus in the Geostibina clade creates a nomenclatural problem. The rarely used family group name Callicerina Jakobson, 1908 has priority over the currently more widely used Geostibina Seevers, 1978; but the first is also a junior homonym of Callicerini Rondani, 1845, which is in use for a tribe of hoverflies (Diptera: Syrphidae). To solve the issue, an application proposing to suppress the name Callicerina Jakobson, 1908 and to keep the more widely used Geostibina Seevers, 1978 has been submitted to the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature (Gusarov 2011). Pending the Commission’s ruling, we maintain current usage and treat the name Geostibina as valid. The ‘true Lomechusini’ clade included Drusilla, Lomechusa, Pella and five other genera represented here by species from the Old World. Within this clade, the genera Lomechusa (two species), Orphnebius (four species) and Pella (two species) were recovered as monophyletic with high support. The genus Drusilla (four species) was recovered as paraphyletic with respect to the morphologically distinct Oriental genus Amaurodera (one species). As currently accepted, Drusilla is distributed worldwide and includes almost 200 species (Hlaváč ). Within Drusilla, there is a fairly distinct group of Palaearctic species related to the type species of the genus, Drusilla canaliculata (revised by Assing 2005). However, Drusilla in the broad sense can only be defined by the lack of unusual characters (e.g. the distinct shape of pronotum in Amaurodera). A worldwide revision of Drusilla is needed to divide the genus into diagnosable monophyletic genera. The genus Zyras (represented in our analyses by six species) was recovered as polyphyletic. The nominotypical subgenus (represented by Z. collaris) was recovered as the sister group to all other ‘true Lomechusini’. Two closely related species of Zyras (Glossacantha) from Thailand were recovered in a separate clade with a very long branch. A third clade included yet another species of Zyras (Glossacantha), one species of Zyras (Rhynchodonia), one Zyras species not yet identified to subgenus and the morphologically very distinct genus Pedinopleurus. Accordingly, even the subgenus Glossacantha is not monophyletic. In the current classification, Zyras is divided into 54 subgenera and includes more than 800 species (Hlaváč ). Some groups formerly treated as subgenera of Zyras have been raised to genus rank (e.g. Pella: Kistner 1972; Maruyama 2006) and new subgenera are being described regularly (e.g. Pace 1999). Like Drusilla, Zyras is a group in need of a worldwide revision. Our results confirm the opinion of Kistner (1972) and Maruyama (2006) that Pella is not related to Zyras and should be treated as a separate genus. H2: Geostibina and the ‘true Lomechusini’ form a sister group to the main Athetini clade. The main Athetini clade was recovered with strong support in a strongly supported sister group relationship with Geostibina and the ‘true Lomechusini‘. The basal nodes of the main Athetini clade were not resolved with good support. H3: All athetine genera with sensillum a of the epipharynx reduced belong to Geostibina. All five genera forming the Geostibina clade (Alevonota, Aloconota, Callicerus, Earota and Geostiba) have sensillum a of the epipharynx reduced. Among the other genera included in this study, only Pelioptera has this character state. In our analyses, Pelioptera formed a sister group to the (Geostibina, ‘true Lomechusini’) clade. The support for this placement was not strong, however, and is further weakened by the fact that the entire COICOII region was missing from the Pelioptera sequence. Given that Pelioptera shares additional character states (see below) with the five genera of Geostibina, we hypothesize that Pelioptera is also a member of Geostibina and that the reduced sensillum a is a synapomorphy for this group. In addition to the six genera included in the molecular analyses, seven further athetine genera were confirmed to possess the reduced sensillum a of the epipharynx (Table 2). All 13 genera also share the shape of the ligula: broad at the base and divided into two separate lobes. We hypothesize that they all belong to Geostibina. Within Athetini, there are additional genera with a fully bilobed ligula. Two of these, Liogluta and Boreophilia, were included in our study and were not recovered as members of the Geostibina clade. Based on our examination, they also have a normally developed sensillum a. Five more genera with a bilobed ligula not included in this study (Madeirostiba, Ousipalia, Saphocallus, Schistoglossa and Tomoglossa) were also confirmed to have a normally developed sensillum a. Based on this evidence, we predict that they do not belong to the Geostibina clade. H4: The ‘false Lomechusini’ are nested within the main Athetini clade. The ‘false Lomechusini’ clade included Meronera, Myrmedonota and 10 other genera (11 species) from the New World. Seven of the included genera were unidentified. The clade was well supported only in the Bayesian analysis (Fig. 1), and when incomplete sequences were included, the ‘false Lomechusini’ were no longer recovered as monophyletic. The position of the ‘false Lomechusini’ within the main Athetini clade was not resolved. However, the ‘false Lomechusini’ are confirmed to belong to the main Athetini clade and thus not to be monophyletic with the ‘true Lomechusini’. Ten of the included genera were collected in Ecuador and two in the USA. Of the five identified genera, two (Ecitopora and Ecitodonia) are exclusively Neotropical. Two genera (Tetradonia and Meronera) are distributed mostly in the Neotropical region, with a few species also in the Nearctic. The fifth genus, Myrmedonota, is known from both the Nearctic and the Oriental regions (but see below). The geographic distribution of the ‘false Lomechusini’ suggests that the clade may have originated in South America and dispersed into North America. More extensive taxon sampling in both Old and New World tropics is needed to test this hypothesis. The placement of Meronera and Myrmedonota in the ‘false Lomechusini’ clade is in line with Elven . The genus Myrmedonota was represented by a species from the Eastern USA, but was originally described from Singapore (Cameron 1920) and is furthermore known from Malaysia, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea. It was only recently reported from North America by Maruyama , who provided a new diagnosis of the genus based on the type species M. cingulata, two new species from the Eastern United States and published descriptions of two species from New Guinea. The geographic distribution of Myrmedonota suggests that the Nearctic species may not be related to and congeneric with the Oriental. We do not propose to remove Myrmedonota from Lomechusini until additional species, in particular the type, have been examined in more detail. H5: Ecitocharini form a monophyletic sister group to Stethusa within the main Athetini clade. The Ecitocharini were recovered as a strongly supported monophyletic group within the main Athetini clade. When only complete sequences were used, Ecitocharini formed a well-supported sister group to the New World athetine genus Stethusa (Figs 1 and S1). However, when taxa with incomplete sequences were included in the analysis, Ecitocharini grouped (with weak support) with the longest branch of the ‘false Lomechusini’ formed by the unidentified genus 3 (Figs 2 and S2). This genus lacked sequence data for the COILeu2COII region, and the 18S sequences of both genus 3 and the Ecitocharini were unusually divergent. We consider the weakly supported sister group relationship between Ecitocharini and genus 3 to be an artefact and treat the well-supported sister group relationship between Ecitocharini and Stethusa as phylogenetically correct. The type genus of Ecitocharini, Ecitochara, was unfortunately not available for this study, which instead included the genera Ecitophya and Ecitomorpha as representatives of the tribe. However, the members of Ecitocharini share several derived morphological character states (Kistner & Jacobson 1990) and are furthermore connected by life style (i.e. association with army ants of the genus Eciton) and geographic distribution. It seems reasonable to assume that the tribe is monophyletic. As the Ecitocharini are nested within the main Athetini clade, their inclusion in Athetini should be uncontroversial. Seevers (1965) rationale for erecting the tribe Ecitocharini was to ‘emphasize their evolutionary and ecological divergence from the Athetini’, but he believed that the former were derived from the latter, which is congruent with this study. We therefore place the name Ecitocharini Seevers, 1965 in synonymy with Athetini Casey, 1910. Ecitocharina may still be used as a valid name at the rank of subtribe, but lack of resolution at the base of the main Athetini clade does not currently allow us to divide the entire tribe into subtribes.

Tribe-level classification of the ALE clade

The aim of this study was to resolve the phylogeny of the major lineages of the ALE clade in order to revise the classification of the tribes involved. With strong support for all three subclades within the ALE clade, the ‘true Lomechusini’, the subtribe Geostibina and the main Athetini clade, we can address the issue of classification. A revised tribe-level classification needs to meet the following criteria: (i) all formally recognized taxa should be monophyletic; (ii) the classification should reflect the three main subclades and be compatible with their phylogenetic relationships: [(Geostibina, Lomechusini) (the main Athetini clade including the ‘false Lomechusini’)]; (iii) the principle of priority should be satisfied; (iv) the recognized family group taxa should be diagnosable using morphological characters, preferably apomorphic states; and (v) the choice of classification should promote stability of scientific names (ICZN, 1999: Preamble). We here discuss three possible alternative classifications, all of which satisfy criteria 1–3 and all of which meet criterion 4 equally well by recognizing the three main subclades of the ALE clade in one way or another. The main difference between the three alternatives is in the ranks of some taxa. Therefore, we will focus on how the changes in classification will affect the stability of names (criterion 5). Alternative 1: raising the rank of Geostibina to tribe. Three tribes are recognized in the ALE clade: Athetini, Geostibini and Lomechusini. Most of the genera and species currently in Athetini and Lomechusini stay in their respective tribes. The members of subtribe Geostibina (most of which belong to the genus Geostiba) are removed from Athetini by raising the rank of the subtribe to tribe. The genera of the ‘false Lomechusini’ are moved from Lomechusini to Athetini. Further subdivision of the three tribes into subtribes is still possible. Alternative 2: moving subtribe Geostibina to Lomechusini. Two tribes are recognized in the ALE clade: Athetini and Lomechusini (including subtribe Geostibina). Most of the genera and species currently in Athetini and Lomechusini stay in their respective tribes. The subtribe Geostibina is moved from Athetini to Lomechusini, while the genera of ‘false Lomechusini’ are moved from Lomechusini to Athetini. Subdivision of the two tribes into subtribes is still possible. Alternative 3: expanding the Lomechusini to include all Athetini. Only one tribe is recognized in the ALE clade: Lomechusini. This tribe is further subdivided into three subtribes: Athetina, Geostibina and Lomechusina. This solution is similar to some earlier classifications (e.g. by Bernhauer & Scheerpeltz 1926) where Athetini and Lomechusini were treated as subtribes of the tribe Myrmedoniini Thomson, 1867. The members of ‘false Lomechusini’ stay in the tribe Lomechusini, but are moved to the subtribe Athetina. If this solution is implemented, hundreds of genera and thousands of species currently in Athetini will need to be moved to Lomechusini, and the largest aleocharine tribe will be abandoned. This solution does not promote stability of names. Furthermore, as the ranks of what are currently treated as tribes Athetini and Lomechusini are lowered to subtribes, it becomes impossible to recognize the taxa currently treated as subtribes of Athetini and Lomechusini, except by inserting a rank of infratribe. The main difference between the three alternatives is in how the stability of classification is promoted. Alternative 1 seems to achieve that goal best and at the same time allows further subdivision of all three tribes into subtribes. We favour this alternative and, consequently, raise the rank of the subtribe Geostibina to tribe and move the genera of ‘false Lomechusini’ to Athetini.

The redefined tribes Athetini, Lomechusini and Geostibini

Most of the Athetini can be diagnosed by a combination of the following characters: sensillum a of the epipharynx fully developed, galea of moderate length, mesocoxae narrowly or moderately separated, and mesoventral process not broad. Most of the Lomechusini can be diagnosed by a combination of the following characters: sensillum a of the epipharynx fully developed, galea significantly elongate, mesocoxae broadly separated, and mesoventral process broad and short. Both in Athetini and Lomechusini, there are exceptions that do not fit the above diagnoses, and a detailed morphological study will be needed to improve the diagnoses of the two tribes. The main diagnostic character and putative synapomorphy for the tribe Geostibini is sensillum a of the epipharynx reduced (e.g. as in Yosii & Sawada 1976: fig. 47B). Geostibini share with Athetini and Lomechusini the tarsal formula 4-5-5 and the presence of the athetine bridge of the aedeagus. Like most Athetini, but unlike Lomechusini, Geostibini have the galea moderately long, mesocoxae narrowly or moderately separated, and mesoventral process not broad. Like Lomechusini and some Athetini, Geostibini have the ligula broad at the base and divided into two separate lobes. Table 2 lists all genera in which reduction in sensillum a of the epipharynx has been confirmed. We place all these genera in the tribe Geostibini. There is no doubt that additional genera will need to be transferred from Athetini to Geostibini. Unfortunately, the main diagnostic character of Geostibini, sensillum a of the epipharynx, is rarely described or illustrated in published papers. Thus, for most athetine genera, direct examination of slide mounted specimens will be needed to assess their tribal placement.

Genus Discerota

The athetine genus Discerota (represented by D. torrentum) formed a well-supported clade with Halobrecta outside the ALE clade. In Elven , Halobrecta was removed from Athetini and tentatively placed in Oxypodini. Like Halobrecta, Discerota lacks the athetine bridge of the aedeagus and has both male and female genitalia similar to some Oxypodini. For these reasons, we move Discerota from Athetini and place it tentatively in Oxypodini as well.

The riparian clade of Athetini

Compared to Elven , we expanded the taxon sampling of Athetini by adding several species associated with riparian habitats. In addition to providing a more rigorous test of the monophyly of the main Athetini clade, this allowed us to test whether the riparian athetines are related to each other or if different lineages have colonized the riparian habitats independently. Remarkably, many riparian taxa were recovered as members of a strongly supported monophyletic group. This riparian clade included Actocharina, Atheta (Dralica) vilis, Brundinia, Parameotica and Hydrosmecta (represented by five species). The monotypic genus Actocharina, originally a subgenus of Atheta, is distributed in Austria and northern Italy where it inhabits sandy river banks in the Kalkalpen. The beetles are minuscule, only up to 1.4 mm long, have reduced eyes, wings and pigmentation and presumably move in the interstitial space between sand particles like many Hydrosmecta. When describing Atheta (Actocharina) leptotyphloides, Bernhauer (1907) mentioned its close relationship to two small species of Hydrosmecta, H. subtilissima and H. tenuissima. With respect to external morphology, Actocharina is indeed similar to the smallest species of Hydrosmecta, for example, H. delicatula or H. tenuissima (cf. figs 162:1 and 164:13, 17 in Benick & Lohse 1974). The main difference between the two genera is Actocharina being more derived in characters related to cryptic interstitial life style. In our analyses, Actocharina formed a well-supported clade with four of the five included species of Hydrosmecta, and the fifth Hydrosmecta species was sister to this clade. We, therefore, consider Actocharina a morphologically derived member of the genus Hydrosmecta and place the name Actocharina Bernhauer, 1907 in synonymy with Hydrosmecta Thomson, 1858.

Conclusions

Elven demonstrated that the tribes Athetini and Lomechusini are not monophyletic and that the tribe Ecitocharini may belong to Athetini. In this study, we thoroughly assessed the basal relationships among the three tribes to propose a phylogenetically robust tribe-level classification. The athetine subtribe Geostibina was shown to be a sister group to the ‘true Lomechusini’. Five athetine genera are included in this clade, and eight more can be referred to it based on morphology. Geostibina and the ‘true Lomechusini’ together form a sister group to the main Athetini clade, which comprises all non-geostibine athetines in addition to the tribe Ecitocharini and the ‘false Lomechusini’. The resolution within the main Athetini clade was poor, but support for the clade itself was strong. The monophyly of the ‘false Lomechusini’ was not strongly supported; nevertheless, there is no doubt about their inclusion in Athetini and their separation from the ‘true Lomechusini’. We propose raising the subtribe Geostibina to the rank of tribe. Doing so will best promote stability of nomenclature, while complying with the criterion of monophyly. We furthermore propose including the ‘false Lomechusini’ and the Ecitocharini in Athetini. It is likely that future revisional work on Athetini and Lomechusini and the inclusion of further genera in large-scale phylogenetic analyses will further change the definition of these tribes. The ‘false Lomechusini’ in particular raise many further questions, such as whether the group is actually monophyletic, which other New World genera belong to it, whether the group is also represented outside the New World, and which are its closest relatives within Athetini. Further studies are also needed on phylogeny of the ‘true Lomechusini’. The molecular markers used in this study may prove suitable for resolving relationships within Zyras and Drusilla, the two most challenging genera within the Lomechusini.

Proposed changes in classification

The following changes in classification of Aleocharinae are proposed (see Table 3 for details): (i) Geostibina, formerly a subtribe of Athetini, is raised to tribe rank as Geostibini Seevers, 1978, stat. nov. Thirteen genera are moved from Athetini to Geostibini. (ii) Three genera are moved from Lomechusini to Athetini. (iii) The family group name Ecitocharini Seevers, 1965 is placed in synonymy with the name Athetini Casey, 1910. All 10 genera formerly treated as members of the tribe Ecitocharini are moved to Athetini. (iv) The genus Discerota Mulsant & Rey, 1874 is removed from Athetini and tentatively included in Oxypodini. (v) The genus name Actocharina Bernhauer, 1907 is placed in synonymy with Hydrosmecta Thomson, 1858. The new combination Hydrosmecta leptotyphloides (Bernhauer, 1907) is established for the species originally described as Atheta (Actocharina) leptotyphloides Bernhauer, 1907.
Table 3

Proposed changes in classification of Aleocharinae

NamePrevious status/placementNew status/placement
Geostibina Seevers, 1978Valid subtribe of AthetiniTribe Geostibini Seevers, 1978, stat. nov.
Alevonota Thomson, 1858AthetiniGeostibini
Aloconota Thomson, 1858AthetiniGeostibini
Callicerus Gravenhorst, 1802AthetiniGeostibini
Chinecallicerus Assing, 2004AthetiniGeostibini
Earota Mulsant & Rey, 1874AthetiniGeostibini
Enalodroma Thomson, 1859AthetiniGeostibini
Geostiba Thomson, 1858AthetiniGeostibini
Homoiocalea Bernhauer, 1943AthetiniGeostibini
Micrearota Casey, 1910AthetiniGeostibini
Pelioptera Kraatz, 1857AthetiniGeostibini
Pseudosemiris Machulka, 1835AthetiniGeostibini
Seeversiella Ashe, 1986AthetiniGeostibini
Tropimenelytron Pace, 1983AthetiniGeostibini
Ecitodonia Seevers, 1965LomechusiniAthetini
Ecitopora Wasmann, 1887LomechusiniAthetini
Tetradonia Wasmann, 1894LomechusiniAthetini
Ecitocharini Seevers, 1965Valid tribeNew synonym of Athetini Casey, 1910
Campbellia Kistner & Jacobson, 1990EcitochariniAthetini
Ecitochara Wasmann, 1887EcitochariniAthetini
Ecitodaemon Reichensperger, 1939EcitochariniAthetini
Ecitomorpha Wasmann, 1889EcitochariniAthetini
Ecitophya Wasmann, 1900EcitochariniAthetini
Ecitoschneirla Kistner & Jacobson, 1990EcitochariniAthetini
Ecitosymbia Bruch, 1923EcitochariniAthetini
Ecitoxenia Wasmann, 1900EcitochariniAthetini
Retteneciton Kistner & Jacobson, 1990EcitochariniAthetini
Seeverseciton Kistner & Jacobson, 1990EcitochariniAthetini
Discerota Mulsant & Rey, 1874AthetiniTentatively Oxypodini
Actocharina Bernhauer, 1907Valid genusNew synonym of Hydrosmecta Thomson, 1858
Actocharina leptotyphloides (Bernhauer, 1907)ActocharinaHydrosmecta leptotyphloides (Bernhauer, 1907), new combination
Proposed changes in classification of Aleocharinae
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