The mitogenome of a malagasy butterfly malaza fastuosus (Mabille, 1884) recovered from the holotype collected over 140 years ago adds support for a new subfamily of hesperiidae (lepidoptera)

Jing Zhang, David C. Lees, Jinhui Shen, Qian Cong, Blanca Huertas, Geoff Martin, Nick V. Grishin

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Scopus citations

Abstract

Malaza fastuosus is a lavishly patterned skipper butterfly from a genus that has three described species, all endemic to the mainland of Madagascar. To our knowledge, M. fastuosus has not been collected for nearly 50 years. To evaluate the power of our techniques to recover DNA, we used a single foreleg of an at least 140-year-old holotype specimen from the collection of the Natural History Museum London with no destruction of external morphology to extract DNA and assemble a complete mitogenome from next generation sequencing reads. The resulting 15 540 bp mitogenome contains 13 protein-coding genes, 22 transfer RNA genes, two ribosomal RNA genes, and an A+T rich region, similarly to other Lepidoptera mitogenomes. Here we provide the first mitogenome also for Trapezitinae (Rachelia extrusus). Phylogenetic analysis of available skipper mitogenomes places Malaza outside of Trapezitinae and Barcinae + Hesperiinae, with a possible sister relationship to Heteropterinae. Of these, at least Heteropterinae, Trapezitinae, and almost all Hesperiinae have monocot-feeding caterpillars. Malaza appears to be an evolutionarily highly distinct ancient lineage, morphologically with several unusual hesperiid features. The monotypic subfamily Malazinae Lees & Grishin subfam. nov. (type genus Malaza) is proposed to reflect this morphological and molecular evidence.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)195-202
Number of pages8
JournalGenome
Volume63
Issue number4
DOIs
StatePublished - 2020

Keywords

  • Ancient DNA
  • Madagascar
  • Next-generation sequencing
  • Paul Mabille
  • Phylogeny

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Biotechnology
  • Molecular Biology
  • Genetics

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