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Article

Taxonomic Structure and Wing Pattern Evolution in the Parnassius mnemosyne Species Complex (Lepidoptera, Papilionidae) †

by
Vladimir A. Lukhtanov
1,* and
Evgeny V. Zakharov
2
1
Department of Karyosystematics, Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, Universitetskaya Nab. 1, 199034 Saint-Petersburg, Russia
2
Centre for Biodiversity Genomics, Department of Integrative Biology, College of Biological Sciences, University of Guelph, Guelph, ON N1G 2W1, Canada
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:70B0957A-F4E4-4090-92C3-20E982A0B5DA.
Insects 2023, 14(12), 942; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects14120942
Submission received: 20 November 2023 / Revised: 6 December 2023 / Accepted: 10 December 2023 / Published: 12 December 2023
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Systematics, Ecology and Evolution of Lepidoptera)

Abstract

:

Simple Summary

The butterfly genus Parnassius attracts the attention of numerous researchers. However, species and populations from Central and Western Asia remain understudied compared to taxa from Western Europe and East Asia. In our study, using the analysis of DNA barcodes and morphology (wing color, male genitalia, and sphragis shape in females), we substantiate the species status for P. nubilosus stat. nov. from Turkmenistan and NE Iran. We demonstrate that the P. mnemosyne group includes three morphologically similar species, P. mnemosyne (Western Eurasia), P. turatii (southwestern Europe), and P. nubilosus, as well as P. ariadne (Altai). The latter species differs from the rest of the group in the presence of red spots on the wings. We also suggest that morphological evolution within the genus involved processes of loss and reappearance of red wing spotting. The pattern of these processes is consistent with the reinforcement theory, which predicts a higher level of divergence between sympatric and allopatric populations and species.

Abstract

In our study, using the analysis of DNA barcodes and morphology (wing color, male genitalia, and female sphragis shape), we show that the group of species close to P. mnemosyne comprises the western and eastern phylogenetic lineages. The eastern lineage includes P. stubbendorfii, P. glacialis, and P. hoenei. The western lineage includes three morphologically similar species: P. mnemosyne (Western Eurasia), P. turatii (southwestern Europe), and P. nubilosus stat. nov. (Turkmenistan and NE Iran), as well as the morphologically differentiated P. ariadne (Altai). The latter species differs from the rest of the group in the presence of red spots on the wings. Parnassius mnemosyne s.s. is represented by four differentiated mitochondrial clusters that show clear association with specific geographic regions. We propose to interpret them as subspecies: P. mnemosyne mnemosyne (Central and Eastern Europe, N Caucasus, N Turkey), P. mnemosyne adolphi (the Middle East), P. mnemosyne falsa (Tian Shan), and P. mnemosyne gigantea (Gissar-Alai in Central Asia). We demonstrate that in P. ariadne, the red spots on the wing evolved as a reversion to the ancestral wing pattern. This reversion is observed in Altai, where the distribution areas of the western lineage, represented by P. ariadne, and the eastern lineage, represented by P. stubbendorfii, overlap. These two species hybridize in Altai, and we hypothesize that the color change in P. ariadne is the result of reinforcement of prezygotic isolation in the contact zone. The lectotype of Parnassius mnemosyne var. nubilosus Christoph, 1873, is designated.

1. Introduction

Butterflies of the genus Parnassius Latreille, 1804, are characterized by a unique type of wing pattern consisting of a milky white background, a combination of black spots and translucent areas, and large, bright red eye-shaped spots [1,2]. Another morphological feature of the genus is that fertilized females carry a mating plug [2], known in the literature as sphragis (plural: sphragides) [3]. It is a firm structure originating from male accessory glands, fixed to the ventral side of the female’s abdomen following insemination, where it blocks the ostium bursae [3,4]. Within the genus Parnassius, sphragides are extremely diverse in size and shape [5]. Despite significant individual variation [6,7], the sphragides are species-specific and represent a reliable character for species identification [2,5].
The genus attracts the attention of taxonomists due to the complexity of its evolutionary history and classification [1,2,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16,17]. It includes a large number of species protected by international, national, and regional laws [18,19,20,21]. It is a model system for studying issues of ecology [22,23,24], biogeography [11,12,25], and insect–plant relationships [26]. It is not surprising, therefore, that significant progress has been made in the study of the evolutionary history and taxonomy of the genus, particularly in the phylogeny reconstruction at the level of subgenera and major species groups [2,8,9,10,11,12,13,15,16,17,27]. There is much less clarity on issues relating to the finer taxonomic structure of the genus at the species level. Especially many unresolved questions remain in the taxonomy of species complexes distributed in the little-studied regions of Central Asia, for example, in species that are close to P. delphius Eversmann, 1843, and P. staudingeri Bang-Haas, 1882 [28].
Oddly enough, similar problems exist for the species living in the much more studied regions of Western Europe and the Asian Far East. An example of such a poorly studied complex is a group of taxa close to P. mnemosyne (Linnaeus, 1758). This group is included in the subgenus Driopa Korshunov, 1988, of the genus Parnassius [13,17]. A morphological feature of the P. mnemosyne species complex is the complete absence of red ocelli on the wings [29]. This complex comprises the western and eastern phylogenetic lineages. The western lineage, whose range occupies the western part of Eurasia from the Pyrenees to the Trans-Urals and Central Asia, is known to be represented by the species P. mnemosyne and P. turatii Fruhstorfer, 1908 [30,31]. The eastern lineage, whose range occupies the eastern part of Eurasia from Altai to the Japanese Islands, is represented by the species P. stubbendorfii Ménétriés, 1849; P. glacialis Butler, 1866; and P. hoenei Schweitzer, 1912 [15]. It has recently been shown that this complex should also include the local Altai species P. ariadne (Lederer, 1853) [13,15], which differs sharply from other species of the group by the presence of red ocelli on the hind wings, thus representing a condition characteristic of the genus Parnassius as a whole.
The Western European and Far Eastern populations of the P. mnemosyne group have been the subject of several phylogeographic studies based on the analysis of mitochondrial genes [8,13,32,33], mitochondrial and nuclear markers [24], mitochondrial genes and allozymes [34], and whole-genome resequencing [21]. However, populations of this group from Eastern Europe, Central Asia, and Altai remain almost completely unstudied.
In our study, we close this gap by presenting data on mitochondrial DNA barcodes, wing patterns, and sphragis shape for 189 specimens from the western lineage of the P. mnemosyne species complex from eastern Europe, the Caucasus, Transcaucasia, the Levant, Iran, and Central Asia, and 11 specimens from P. ariadne from Kazakhstan and Russia.
As a result of the research, we
(1) Demonstrate that the western lineage of the P. mnemosyne species complex is a group consisting of three morphologically similar species: P. mnemosyne s.s. (Western Eurasia), P. turatii (southwestern Europe), and P. nubilosus Christoph, 1873, stat. nov. (Turkmenistan, NE Iran), and the morphologically highly differentiated species P. ariadne (Altai).
(2) Designate the lectotype of the taxon P. mnemosyne var. nubilosus Christoph, 1873.
(3) Show that P. mnemosyne s.s. is represented by four differentiated mitochondrial clusters that demonstrate clear connections to certain geographical regions. We propose to interpret them as subspecies: P. mnemosyne mnemosyne (Central and Eastern Europe, Northern Caucasus, and Northern Turkey), P. mnemosyne adolphi Bryk, 1911 (the Middle East, Transcaucasus), P. mnemosyne falsa Pagenstecher, 1911 (Tian Shan), and P mnemosyne gigantea Staudinger, 1886 (Gissaro-Alai in Central Asia). Alternatively, these four clusters may be interpreted as four subspecies groups or as four closely related allopatric species.
(4) Show that the red ocelli on the wings of P. ariadne arose secondarily as a reversion to the ancient wing color pattern characteristic of the genus Parnassius as a whole and hypothesize that the red spots arose in P. ariadne as a result of reinforcement of prezygotic reproductive isolation in the zone of secondary contact between the western and eastern lineages of the P. mnemosyne species complex.

2. Materials and Methods

2.1. Samples

Standard mitochondrial DNA barcodes (658 bp fragments of the cytochrome c oxidase subunit I gene) were obtained for 189 dried samples of the western lineage of the P. mnemosyne species complex of P. mnemosyne, eleven samples of P. ariadne, and three samples of P. nordmanni (Appendix A). The specimens of P. mnemosyne were collected in the European part of Russia, Turkey, Iran, Israel, Georgia, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, and Tajikistan (Appendix A). The collecting sites cover nearly all the known distribution regions of P. mnemosyne in the eastern half of its distribution range. None of the specimens were subjected to any chemical treatment before desiccation. The climate of the regions ensured quick drying of specimens, which were stored at room temperature (18–25 °C) for 5–20 years. The specimens examined are deposited in the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences and the research collection of B. Khramov (St. Petersburg, Russia). Full details of the voucher samples are presented in Table S1 in Supplementary Material S1.

2.2. COI Amplification and Sequencing

DNA was extracted with standard protocols [35] from single legs removed from dried voucher specimens prior to their rehydration for spreading. All the voucher specimens are now identified with labels that include the butterfly field numbers (Table S1 in Supplementary Material S1). Additionally, unique Process IDs automatically generated by the BOLD system have been added to each specimen record. For the majority of samples (175 specimens), the primers LepF1 (5_-ATTCAACCAATCATAAAGATATTGG-3_) and LepR1 (5_-TAAACTTCTGGATGTCCAAAAAATCA-3_) amplified the target 658-bp fragment of COI. For the rest of the samples, most of which were 20 or more years old, we amplified shorter overlapping fragments by using the primer combination MLepF1 (5_-GCTTTCCCACGAATAAATAATA- 3_)-LepR1 (407-bp amplicon) and MLepR1 (5_-CCTGTTCCAGCTCCATTTTC-3_)-LepF1 (311-bp amplicon). Sequences were obtained by using ABI 3730XL sequencers (Applied Biosystems).

2.3. Sequence Analysis

Sequences were edited to remove ambiguous base calls and primer sequences and assembled by using SEQUENCHER (Gene Codes, Ann Arbor, MI, USA) (https://www.genecodes.com/sequencher-features, accessed on 18 October 2023). Sequences were then aligned using CLUSTAL W (Conway Institute, University College Dublin, Ireland) [36] software and manually edited. Sequence information was entered in the Barcode of Life Database (BOLD, https://www.boldsystems.org/, accessed on 18 October 2023) along with an image and collateral information for each voucher specimen. The detailed specimen records and sequence information, including trace files, are available on BOLD in the project LOWAM or in the dataset DS-MNEMOSYN. All sequences have been submitted to GenBank (Appendix A).
A comparison of the obtained COI barcodes revealed 38 unique haplotypes within the five studied species (Appendix A). The data matrix for subsequent phylogenetic analysis also included the mitochondrial haplotypes known for P. mnemosyne and P. turatii from Western Europe and Asia Minor, as well as the known haplotypes of other species of the subgenus Driopa [13,32,37,38,39,40,41,42]. Parnassius orleans Oberthür, 1890, is known to be the sister group to all other species of the subgenus Driopa [13,15,17], so it was chosen as the outgroup for rooting the tree. The final alignment of the analyzed samples (file in FASTA format) is presented in Supplementary Material S2.
The Bayesian analysis of the matrix was performed using the program MrBayes3.2 [43] as previously described [44,45]. A GTR substitution model with gamma-distributed rate variation across sites and a proportion of invariable sites was specified before running the program for 10,000,000 generations with default settings. The first 2500 trees (out of 10000) were discarded prior to computing a consensus phylogeny and posterior probabilities. The consensus of the obtained trees was visualized using FigTree 1.4.4 (http://tree.bio.ed.ac.uk/software/), accessed on 18 October 2023).
To create the haplotype network, sequences with missing nucleotides were removed from the alignment. The ends of the sequences were truncated so that all sequences were the same length, resulting in a 632-bp alignment. The maximum parsimony haplotype network was constructed using TCS v. 1.21 [46]) and visualized using the program tcsBU tool [47]. The minimum COI p-distances (%) between the taxa of the subgenus Driopa were calculated using the MEGA 11 program [48].

2.4. Morphology Analysis

All samples that were used for barcode analysis were also used for morphological studies. Additionally, the samples from the collection of the Zoological Institute (St. Petersburg, Russia) were inspected. This collection includes several thousand individuals of the subgenus Driopa, including two syntypes of P. nubilosus and the samples of P. nubilosus collected relatively recently by V. Dubatolov in Kopetdagh (Turkmenistan). Photographs of butterflies and sphragides were taken with a Nikon D810 digital camera (Nikon Corporation, Minato City, Tokyo, Japan)) equipped with a Nikon AF-S Micro Nikkor 105 mm lens, using the built-in flash as a lighting source.
For genitalia preparation, adult abdomens were soaked in hot (90 °C) 10% KOH for 3–10 min. Then, they were transferred to water, and the genitalia were carefully extracted and macerated under a stereomicroscope with the help of a pair of preparation needles or with the help of a needle and a watchmaker’s tweezer. Once cleansed of all unwanted elements, they were transferred and stored in glycerin. Cleansed genital armatures were handled, studied, and photographed while immersed in glycerin, free from pressure due to mounting and, therefore, free from the ensuing distortion. Photographs of genitalia were taken with a Leica M205C binocular microscope (Leica Microsystems, Wetzlar, Germany) equipped with a Leica DFC495 digital camera and processed using the Leica Application Suite v.4.5.0 software.
To reconstruct the probabilities of ancestral states, a Bayesian approach was used, as implemented in the program MrBayes3.2 [43]. The states studied were coded as 0 (absence of red spots) and 1 (presence of red spots). These states were implemented into a matrix of molecular features. The probability of ancestral states for each node was calculated separately. The command block used to analyze ancestral states is given in Supplementary Material S3.

3. Results

3.1. Phylogenetic Analysis

Within the subgenus Parnassius (Driopa) (excluding P. orleans), Bayesian analysis identified three highly supported (in all cases, posterior probability = 1) major clades (Figure 1). The first clade is represented by the species P. nordmanni Ménétriés, 1850. The second clade is represented by the species P. eversmanni Ménétriés, 1850 + P. clodius Ménétriés, 1855. The third clade is represented by species of the P. mnemosyne group, that is, species lacking red spots on the wings. The third clade also included P. ariadne, a species with red spots. The third clade is divided into two highly supported subclades, which can be designated as the western and eastern subclades (Figure 1).
The red-spotted species P. ariadne was found to be deeply nested within the western subclade. Within the western subclade, four main lineages were identified. These are the lineages of (1) P. mnemosyne, (2) P. nubilosus stat. nov., (3) P. ariadne, and (4) P. turatii. The phylogenetic relationships between these lineages were not solved, most likely because the “barcode” sequences of mtDNA were insufficient to uncover the finer phylogenetic relations.
Within the eastern subclade, three main lineages were identified, which correspond to the species P. stubbendorfii, P. glacialis, and P. hoenei. Within the species P. glacialis, two sublineages were found, which correspond to mainland (China) and island (Japan) populations.
Within the species P. mnemosyne (Figure 2), three highly supported sublineages were identified, which are designated as P. mnemosyne adolphi (the Middle East), P. mnemosyne falsa (Tian Shan), and P. mnemosyne gigantea (Gissar-Alai in Central Asia). The haplotypes of P. mnemosyne mnemosyne from East Europe, NW Turkey, and Caucasus were found to form a basal polytomy on the tree. In the TCS haplotype network, members of this polytomy were found as a separate compact group of similar haplotypes (Figure 3).
All the detected lineages, both major (Figure 1) and secondary lineages (Figure 2), were found to show a clear connection with certain geographical regions (Figure 4): P. turatii with southwestern Europe, P. mnemosyne with Western Eurasia, P. nubilosus stat. nov. with Turkmenistan and NE Iran, P. ariadne with Altai and Saur-Tarbagatai Mts, P. mnemosyne mnemosyne with Central and Eastern Europe, N Caucasus and N Turkey, P. mnemosyne adolphi with the Middle East, P. mnemosyne falsa with Tian Shan, and P. mnemosyne gigantea with Gissar-Alai region in Central Asia.
The minimum COI p-distances between the species of the subgenus Driopa are shown in Table 1.

3.2. Morphology

Wing pattern. The wing pattern of butterflies in the P. mnemosyne group is very variable (Figure 5 and Figure 6). However, it is possible to identify elements that are fixed or almost fixed for individual populations. First, it is necessary to note the complete absence of red spots in all species except P. ariadne. In P. ariadne, red spots are present, with the exception of rare aberrant specimens (Figure 6H). A feature of butterflies from Tian Shan (subspecies falsa), Gissaro-Alai (subspecies gigantea), and the Middle East (the taxa nubilosus and adolphi) is a white band in the apical transparent part of the forewings.
The males of the taxon nubilosus are characterized by the complete absence of black spots on the hind wings, reduced black spots on the forewings, and an additional small black streak on the discal cell of the forewing (shown by a blue arrow in Figure 5A,B). The last three characters, although they create a characteristic appearance for P. nubilosus, are not absolutely specific to this taxon. Sporadically, the males without black spots on the hind wings, with a reduced pattern on the forewings and with an additional small black streak on the discal cell of the forewing, are found in populations classified as P. mnemosyne gigantea, P. mnemosyne adolphi, P. mnemosyne mnemosyne, and P. turatii (but not P. mnemosyne falsa).
Male genitalia. In P. nubilosus (Figure 7A,B) as well as in P. mnemosyne (Figure 7C,D), uncus paired; branches of the gnathos are straight, rod-shaped; saccus is conical with a rounded apex; juxta is strongly sclerotized, V-shaped; valvae are massive; the caudal (lower) process of the valva is separated from the lobe-shaped costal (upper) process by a semicircular notch; aedeagus is thin, long, almost cylindrical. The specific features of the taxon nubilosus are compact, small-sized valvae with square outlines from the lateral view (Figure 7B) and a massive saccus (Figure 7A). In general, the male genitalia of P. nubilosus and P. mnemosyne are similar to the genitalia of other Driopa species studied by P. Gorbunov [49].
Sphragis. (Figure 8). Sphragis appears in females after copulation. It is located at the end of the abdomen, on the ventral side. In P. nubilosus (Figure 8A,B), the sphragis is smaller than in P. mnemosyne and has a triangular (or almost triangular) outline when viewed from the side (Figure 8).

3.3. Ancestral State Reconstruction

Reconstruction of ancestral states using the MrBayes 3.2 program showed that, with a probability of 92%, the common ancestor of the P. mnemosyne clade did not have red ocelli on the wings (Figure 1). The common ancestor of the eastern subclade did not have red ocelli with a 99% probability. The common ancestor of the western subclade, which includes species closely related to P. mnemosyne and P. ariadne, did not have red ocelli with a 96% probability. Thus, with a 96% probability, the red ocelli of P. ariadne arose secondarily, probably as a reversion to the condition observed in species of the subgenus occupying a more basal position on the phylogenetic tree.

3.4. Nomenclature and Lectotype Designation of P. nubilosus

The type series of Parnassius mnemosyne var. nubilosus was collected by famous Russian (of German origin) entomologist Hugo Christoph in 1870 and 1871 from the area of Hadschyabad and Tasch in northeastern Iran [50], a region for which the name Hyrcania was used in the zoological literature of the time [51]. Judging by the original description, the type series included several specimens. This is evidenced by the fact that the taxon was not uncommon in the type-locality (“nicht selten”), the plural is used several times in the description of butterflies, and descriptions of both sexes are given in [50].
It is known that one part of Christoph’s collections from Iran (Persia) first ended up in the collection of Grand Duke Nikolai Mikhailovich Romanov and then in the Zoological Institute in St. Petersburg, and the other part of these collections came through H.J. Elwes’s collection to the Natural History Museum in London [52]. One syntype (male) of P. mnemosyne var. nubilosus was discovered by Verity [53] in London, where it remains today [54]. This syntype is depicted in the studies of Verity [53] and Tshikolovets and coauthors [55]. This male was mistakenly called the holotype in the study of Tshikolovets with coauthors [55]. According to the Codex of Zoological Nomenclature (Article 74.5) [56], this action does not constitute a valid lectotype designation.
Two other syntypes of P. mnemosyne var. nubilosus, originating from the collection of the Grand Duke Nikolai Mikhailovich Romanov, were found by us in the collection of the Zoological Institute.
The name nubilosus was repeatedly used in the taxonomic literature not only for butterflies from NE Iran and S Turkmenistan but also for butterflies from other regions, including Europe [51,53,57], which is obviously erroneous based on the data we received. Therefore, to maintain the stability of zoological nomenclature, we designate the lectotype of Parnassius mnemosyne var. nubilosus.
As a lectotype, we select the male specimen shown in Figure 9 and bearing the following labels: “Koлл. Beл. Kнязя | Hикoлaя | Mиxaилoвичa.” (in Russian Translation: “coll. Grand Duke Nikolai Mikhailovich)” (printed); “Hyrcania | v. Nebulosus” [sic]” (in upper side, handwritten); “Alph” (eraky) (in underside, printed); “♂ Lectotype | P. mnemosyne | var. nubilosus | Christoph, 1873 | Lukhtanov des. | 24 Oct 2023” (handwritten). The lectotype is preserved in the collection of the Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg.
The paralectotype (female) in the collection of the Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg has the following labels: “Hyrcania | v. Nebulosus” [sic]” (in upper side, handwritten), “Alph” (eraky) (in underside, printed); “Koлл. Beл. Kнязя | Hикoлaя | Mиxaилoвичa.” (in Russian Translation: “coll. Grand Duke Nikolai Mikhailovich)” (printed); “Paralectotype ♀| P. mnemosyne | var. nubilosus | Christoph, 1873 | Lukhtanov des. | 24 Oct 2023” (handwritten). The male from the collection of the Natural History Museum in London, figured by Verity [53] and Tshikolovets et al. [55], also becomes the paralectotype.
Interestingly, the lectotype has the identification “Nebulosus” (the word is misspelled). Judging by the label, it was made by Sergei Alpheraky, who was the curator of the Grand Duke’s collection. The same misspelling of this name (“Nebulosus”) is also found in the monograph by Grum-Grshimailo [58]. Thus, this spelling is more likely to be an unjustified correction of the original spelling than a misprint.

3.5. Taxonomy and Nomenclature of P. ariadne

Eversmann (ref. [59], pp. 539–540, Table IX, Figure 1a–c) described and figured a new species named Doritis clarius, mentioning that it derived from “promontoriis Altaicis australibus” (mountain spurs of south Altai). However, the name Doritis clarius Eversmann, 1843, is invalid as it is a junior secondary homonym of Papilio clarius Hübner, 1805 (currently, both taxa belong to the genus Parnassius) and was replaced by the name Doritis ariadne Lederer (ref. [60], p. 354) by Hemming (ref. [61], p. 198). The name Doritis ariadne was first published by Lederer [60] in synonymy with Doritis clarius Eversmann, 1843, and is available according to Article 11.6.1 [56], as it was used before 1961 first by Hemming (ref. [61], p. 198).
The lectotype of Doritis clarius Eversmann, 1843, was designated by Lukhtanov and coauthors [62]. It is preserved in the collection of the Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg. This is a male labelled “coll Eversmann” (printed), “clarius ♂” (handwritten), “clarius Eversmann | 1843 Lectotypus ♂ | Kreuzberg design. | 12.09.1989” (red paper, handwritten), “Tarbagatei” (broken label with a handwritten inscription), “Zoological Institute | St. Petersburg | INS_LEP_0000666” (printed) (Figure 10). The lectotype of Doritis clarius Eversmann, 1843, also becomes the lectotype of Doritis ariadne Lederer, 1853, according to Code Article 72.7 [56].
The designated lectotype is virtually identical with the male figured by Eversmann (ref. [59], Table IX, Figure 1a,b); most likely, it is this specimen that is depicted by Eversmann on the plate (Table IX, Figure 1a,b). According to the label, the lectotype originated from the “Tarbagatai” Mountains in eastern Kazakhstan. These mountains are located to the south of the Altai Mountains. In old literature, the Tarbagatai Mountains were often considered a part of the Altai (e.g., [63]), but currently, they are treated as a part of the Saur-Tarbagatai mountain system, which is located between Altai and Tian Shan.
P. ariadne is a local species known from the Kazakhstani, Russian, and Chinese parts of Altai and from the Saur-Tarbagatai mountain system in Kazakhstan and China. Populations of this species comprise three geographical groups: (1) the Saur-Tarbagatai group, (2) the group inhabiting the Altai mountains in the Irtysh river basin (separated from the first group by the Zaisan depression), and (3) the group inhabiting the Altai mountains in the basin of the Ob River (separated from the Irtysh group by the high main drainage divide of the Altai). We did not find any differentiation between butterflies from these three groups in the COI gene, which is in stark contrast to the situation found within P. mnemosyne.
As for morphology, there are also no significant differences between butterflies from these three population groups. An exception is the population of P. ariadne, described as P. ariadne erlik Yakovlev, 2009 [64] from the uppermost part of the Chuya River basin in the eastern part of the Russian Altai, where butterflies have small red eye-shaped spots, and individuals without red eye-shaped spots, as in Figure 6H, are relatively common. However, these characteristics are neither fixed nor unique. In addition, as a distinctive feature of the subspecies P. ariadne erlik, its association with the plant Corydalis stricta Steph. ex DC. (Papaveraceae: Fumarioideae) (the probable food plant of the caterpillars) was noted [64], while the remaining populations of the species are associated with Corydalis nobilis (L.) Pers. We obtained a DNA barcode from one individual of P. ariadne erlik with characteristically reduced red eye-shaped spots. The individual was collected by V. Lukhtanov 15 km north of Kosh-Agach on a mountain slope overgrown with Corydalis stricta, not far from the subspecies-type locality. Its DNA barcode differed from the barcodes of individuals from other populations by a single nucleotide substitution, which cannot be considered a serious distinction. We therefore consider this population, associated with Corydalis stricta, to be a highland form of P. ariadne rather than a separate subspecies.
For this reason, we consider all of the following names proposed as subspecific names as synonyms of P. ariadne ariadne:
clarus Bryk et Eisner, 1932 (TL: Saur-Gebirge);
dentatus Austaut, 1889(TL: “…les montagnes de Saisan…”;
erlik Yakovlev, 2009(TL: «Altai Rep., Chikhacheva Mts., Tabduair (Talduair) Mt., 2500 m»);
jiadengyuensis Huang et Murayama, 1992(TL: Jiadengyu, Altai Mts, Xinjiang, China).

3.6. Nomenclature of P. mnemosyne falsa

For Tien Shan populations of P. mnemosyne, the name P. mnemosyne orientalis Verity, 1911, is often used [29,65]. However, the name orientalis Verity, 1911, is infrasubspecific and an unavailable name since it was described as Parnassius mnemosyne var. gigantea race orientalis Verity, 1911 (ref. [53], p. 321), thus is quadrinomial and cannot be used for nomenclatural purposes. The oldest available name for this taxon is Parnassius mnemosyne var. falsa Pagenstecher, 1911 (ref. [66], p. 305). Pagenstecher attributed falsa to Bryk in his paper published in December 1911 [66], whereas Bryk’s name [67] was published on 1 June 1912, so Pagenstecher made it available with the type locality ‘Aulia, Ala, Zentralasien’. “Aulia, Ala” is a misspelling for Aulie-Ata (now Taraz) in Kazakhstan, a city located near the westernmost part of the Kyrgyz range in the Tien Shan.

4. Discussion

At the level of species and species groups, the topology of our mitochondrial tree (Figure 1) is fully compatible with the topology obtained for the subgenus Driopa using multigene mitochondrial [15] and nuclear phylogenomic data [17]. Thus, there are no conflicting signals in mitochondrial and nuclear DNAs and no reason to assume the influence of Wolbachia or introgressions [68,69] that would lead to mitochondrial discordance in the subgenus Driopa. At the same time, the relatively low resolution of phylogenetic analysis based on DNA barcodes should be noted. In our study, this manifests itself in the fact that the species of the Western subclade and the European populations of P. mnemosyne appear as polytomies on the phylogenetic tree. Clearly, the addition of nuclear genes is highly desirable in future studies to resolve these polytomies [70].
At the level of terminal lineages, the resulting topology is compatible with the pattern that would be expected if diversification was allopatric, that is, strictly confined to specific geographic regions. The P. turatii lineage is limited to the mountainous regions of southwestern Europe. This type of habitat is not unusual for many species [71]. The lineage of P. mnemosyne mnemosyne is limited to central and eastern Europe, including the adjacent territories of the Urals, Trans-Urals, North Caucasus, and Northern Turkey. The P. mnemosyne adolphi lineage is found in the highlands of Western Asia. The P. mnemosyne falsa lineage is limited to the Tian Shan. The lineage of P. mnemosyne gigantea is limited to the mountain systems of the Gissaro-Alai and western Pamirs. The P. nubilosus lineage is found in the mountain systems of northeastern Iran and Turkmenistan (Kopetdagh). The P. ariadne lineage is found in Altai and the Saur-Tarbagatai mountain system. There are numerous species and subspecies endemic to each of the above regions, and thus, these regions represent areas of independent speciation and subspeciation [71,72,73]. We recognize that nuclear, and especially genome-wide, data would be very important to support this conclusion. However, we assume the absence of mito-nuclear discordance and the pattern “one lineage–one geographic region” indicates that the mitochondrial phylogeny correctly reflects the processes of phylogenesis and geographic differentiation in the subgenus Driopa.
The level of mitochondrial differentiation between the studied lineages ranges from 0.95 to 2.42% for the subspecies of P. mnemosyne and from 2.29 to 7.8% for the species of the subgenus Driopa. Taking into account these data and the known rates of mitochondrial evolution in insects [74,75,76], we come to the conclusion that the age of these lineages is in the range of 0.5–5 million years. This range fits entirely within the Pliocene and Pleistocene periods. These age estimations for the subgenus Driopa correspond to the dates in the studies of previous authors [13,17]. In the study of Michel et al. [13], P. mnemosyne falsa (=orientalis) and P. mnemosyne gigantea are presented as poorly differentiated taxa, which is a consequence of an error in the subspecies identification. In the case of P. mnemosyne gigantea, this study presents a specimen from the Chatkal Range (Tian Shan), which actually belongs to P. mnemosyne falsa. Therefore, it can be assumed that the early divergence of the abovementioned taxa occurred in Pliocene and Pleistocene refugia in the Pyrenees and/or Apennines (turatii), Altai (ariadne), Kopetdagh (nubilosus), South Anatolia and Transcaucasus (adolphi), the mountains of southeastern Europe and Caucasus (mnemosyne s.s.), Tian Shan (falsa), and Gissaro-Alai (gigantea). Evolution in these refugia led to deep differentiation and, in four cases, to speciation.
Previously, an analysis of molecular markers revealed the taxonomic heterogeneity of populations attributed to P. mnemosyne [13]. On this basis, P. turatii was isolated from this complex as a separate species [30,31]. Our data show that the structure of this group is even more complex and includes another deeply differentiated lineage, namely, P. nubilosus. The study of morphology shows that this lineage has a set of almost fixed differences in the pattern of the wings, the different shapes of the valva in males, and a fixed difference in the shape of the sphragis in females. The latter feature is traditionally considered species-specific [1,2], although it should be borne in mind that such a structure is characteristic of the so-called complete sphragis. Sometimes in nature (and, accordingly, in museums), females with frail or incomplete sphragides are found. Such incomplete sphragides are probably produced by males that had mated several times previously and thus had exhausted the resources necessary to produce a sphragis of normal bulk [3].
Theoretically, the complete allopatry of the taxa P. mnemosyne and P. nubilosus and the parapatry of P. mnemosyne and P. turatii allow them to be interpreted as subspecies of a single species. However, from the point of view of the criteria we proposed earlier [28], and taking into account the fact that the COI threshold higher than 2.0% genetic distance produces molecular groupings largely consistent with traditional, morphologically defined species [77,78,79], they should be interpreted as species.
Our proposed classification of P. mnemosyne sensu stricto as a system of four subspecies contradicts the traditional systems adopted in many studies [1,29], in which the number of subspecies can approach 200 [29]. We cannot exclude that a more detailed study, based on more comprehensive material and genome-wide markers, will reveal a more complex structure in the four subspecies we suggested and the presence of additional sublineages that can be interpreted as subspecies. In principle, even from the material we present in this study, it is clear that P. mnemosyne adolphi includes three differentiated sublineages: (1) a sublineage from SE Turkey and the Levant, (2) a sublineage from the mountains of Southern Zagros, and (3) a sublineage from southern Transcaucasia and northern Iran. There is also no doubt that P. mnemosyne mnemosyne from Europe has a finer genetic sub-structure [21,32,34]. For example, Bayesian clustering analyses based on allozymes supported the presence of three main genetic lineages in the Carpathian Basin [34]. However, we are convinced that the number of these valid subspecies is not as large as is believed [29], and even if the additional subspecies are found, they will be part of the four subspecies we have identified. Therefore, it is possible that the four subspecies we suggested can be interpreted as groups of subspecies or even separate allopatric species. The latter is especially likely in relation to P. mnemosyne adolphi, which has a particularly high level of genetic differentiation and has previously been considered as a candidate for a separate species [13,30].
The most intriguing question in the evolution of the P. mnemosyne species complex is the origin and loss of a specialized reduced wing pattern without red ocelli on the hindwings. Although the red-spotted wing pattern undoubtedly predominates in the genus Parnassius as a whole [1,2], our data show that the white-black pattern without red ocelli is ancestral for the P. mnemosyne species group and that the red ocelli evolved in P. ariadne de novo as a reversion to the wild type. The re-appearance of the red spots is observed in the secondary contact zone in Altai, where the western branch of the complex, represented by the species P. ariadne, overlaps with the eastern branch, represented by the species P. stubbendorfii. These two species sporadically hybridize in Altai [80], and we hypothesize that the reversion to the red-ocelli of P. ariadne is the result of increased prezygotic isolation in order to avoid the maladaptive hybridization [81]. Like any other evolutionary hypothesis, this assumption is difficult to test experimentally, and testing using comparative phylogenetic analysis [82] methods requires a larger number of pairs of species. However, two points should be emphasized here. First, living in sympatry between the two sister lineages is correlated with clear, fixed differences between them in the male wing color, a feature on which the behavioral mechanism of prezygotic isolation in butterflies is based [81]. Second, these interspecific differences arose in situ—directly in the zone of secondary contact between the species. Both points correspond exactly to the predictions of reinforcement theory [82].
We can also hypothesize that interspecific hybridization between the western and eastern subclades could be a trigger for the re-appearance of the red ocelli in P. ariadne. As our analysis shows, the ancestors of both western and eastern subclades did not have red ocelli; however, as is known, distant hybridization can result in characters that were absent in the parental forms [83].

Supplementary Materials

The following supporting information can be downloaded at: https://www.mdpi.com/article/10.3390/insects14120942/s1, Supplementary Material S1: List of the studied voucher samples; Supplementary Material S2: The alignment of the analyzed COI sequences; Supplementary Material S3 Reconstruction of ancestral states.

Author Contributions

Conceptualization, V.A.L. and E.V.Z.; methodology, V.A.L. and E.V.Z.; software, V.A.L. and E.V.Z.; formal analysis, V.A.L. and E.V.Z.; data curation, V.A.L. and E.V.Z.; writing—original draft preparation, V.A.L.; writing—review and editing, V.A.L. and E.V.Z. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

The study was supported by the Russian Science Foundation Grant No. 19-14-00202 (Continuation) awarded to the Zoological Institute of the Russian Academy of Sciences (St. Petersburg, Russian Federation) and by the state research project 122031100272-3.

Data Availability Statement

All the analyzed DNA sequences are available via the GenBank links provided.

Acknowledgments

We thank Adam Cotton (Chiang Mai, Thailand) for valuable comments regarding the nomenclature of P. mnemosyne falsa. We thank three anonymous reviewers for their criticism and suggestions. The authors are sincerely grateful to S. Yu. Sinev for help in working with the collection of the Zoological Institute (St. Petersburg), A. V. Gagarina (St. Petersburg) for help in sequencing the sample of P. ariadne erlik, B. A. Khramov (St. Petersburg) for the materials provided for examination, A. Novikova (Jerusalem) and E. A. Pazhenkova (Ljubljana) for assistance in field research, and Ju. Ja. Sokolova (Bethesda) and V. V. Dubatolov (Novosibirsk) for providing the samples of P. nubilosus from Turkmenistan.

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

Appendix A. List of the Studied Samples and Obtained COI Sequences

BOLD IDGenBank IDHaplotypeIdentificationCountryRegion
LOWAM001-08OR822545gig1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM002-08OR822537gig1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM003-08OR822507gig1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM004-08OR822401gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts
LOWAM005-08OR822544gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts
LOWAM006-08OR822581gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts
LOWAM007-08OR822585ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanMoldatoo Mts
LOWAM008-08OR822475ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanMoldatoo Mts
LOWAM009-08OR822518ori2mnemosyneKyrgyzstanMoldatoo Mts
LOWAM010-08OR822548gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM011-08OR822588gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM012-08OR822423gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM013-08OR822478mne5mnemosyneTurkeyOvitdagi Gecidi
LOWAM014-08OR822546mne6mnemosyneTurkeyOvitdagi Gecidi
LOWAM015-08OR822577mne3mnemosyneRussiaDon River
LOWAM016-08OR822394mne3mnemosyneRussiaDon River
LOWAM017-08OR822413gig1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM018-08OR822525gig6mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM019-08OR822524gig4mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM020-08OR822403mne3mnemosyneRussiaSaratovskaya Oblast
LOWAM021-08OR822586mne2mnemosyneRussiaSaratovskaya Oblast
LOWAM022-08OR822563mne3mnemosyneRussiaSaratovskaya Oblast
LOWAM023-08OR822554mne4mnemosyneRussiaSaratovskaya Oblast
LOWAM024-08OR822454mne3mnemosyneRussiaSaratovskaya Oblast
LOWAM025-08OR822543mne3mnemosyneRussiaSaratovskaya Oblast
LOWAM026-08OR822532gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanW Gissar Mts
LOWAM027-08OR822515ori3mnemosyneKazakhstanKaratau Mts
LOWAM028-08OR822520ori3mnemosyneKazakhstanKaratau Mts
LOWAM029-08OR822502gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTaribak
LOWAM030-08OR822471gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTaribak
LOWAM031-08OR822490gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTaribak
LOWAM032-08OR822523gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanNuratau Mts
LOWAM033-08OR822421gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanNuratau Mts
LOWAM034-08OR822419gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanNuratau Mts
LOWAM036-08OR822448mne2mnemosyneRussiaPskovskaya Oblast
LOWAM037-08OR822459mne4mnemosyneRussiaPskovskaya Oblast
LOWAM038-08OR822452ori4mnemosyneKyrgyzstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM039-08OR822428ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM040-08OR822506ori4mnemosyneKyrgyzstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM041-08OR822406ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlabel Pass
LOWAM042-08OR822465mne3mnemosyneRussiaBelgorodskaya oblast
LOWAM043-08OR822426mne3mnemosyneRussiaBelgorodskaya oblast
LOWAM044-08OR822503mne1mnemosyneRussiaBelgorodskaya oblast
LOWAM045-08OR822481gig7mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM046-08OR822493gig7mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM047-08OR822538gig7mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM048-08OR822444gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM049-08OR822411gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM050-08OR822408gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM051-08OR822590gig8mnemosyneTajikistanRevad
LOWAM052-08OR822477gig2mnemosyneTajikistan
LOWAM055-08OR822420gig8mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts
LOWAM056-08OR822404gig2mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts
LOWAM057-08OR822480gig2mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts
LOWAM058-08OR822508ori1mnemosyneKazakhstanKarzhantau Mts
LOWAM059-08OR822460ori1mnemosyneKazakhstanKarzhantau Mts
LOWAM060-08OR822418ori1mnemosyneKazakhstanKarzhantau Mts
LOWAM061-08OR822425ori1mnemosyneKazakhstanSaryaigyr
LOWAM062-08OR822587gig2mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts (West)
LOWAM063-08OR822469gig8mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts (West)
LOWAM064-08OR822447ori9mnemosyneKazakhstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM065-08OR822517ori9mnemosyneKazakhstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM066-08OR822552ori9mnemosyneKazakhstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM067-08OR822415ori6mnemosyneKazakhstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM069-08OR822551mne7mnemosyneRussiaW Caucasus
LOWAM070-08OR822533mne5mnemosyneRussiaW Caucasus
LOWAM072-08OR822571ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanChatkalsky Khrebet
LOWAM073-08OR822453ori7mnemosyneKyrgyzstanTakhtalyk
LOWAM074-08OR822491ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanNaryn-Too Mts
LOWAM075-08OR822570ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanNaryn-Too Mts
LOWAM076-08OR822498ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAk-Muz
LOWAM077-08OR822557ori2mnemosyneKyrgyzstanMoldatoo Mts
LOWAM078-08OR822516ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanMoldatoo Mts
LOWAM079-08OR822439ori9mnemosyneKyrgyzstanMoldatoo Mts
LOWAM080-08OR822500ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanSongkel Lake
LOWAM081-08OR822463ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanSongkel Lake
LOWAM082-08OR822436ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanSongkel Lake
LOWAM086-08OR822567nub1nubilosusTurkmenistanKopetdagh
LOWAM087-08OR822476gig8mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts (West)
LOWAM088-08OR822432gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts (West)
LOWAM089-08OR822505gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts (West)
LOWAM090-08OR822528ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanChychkan
LOWAM091-08OR822501ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanChychkan
LOWAM092-08OR822510ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanChychkan
LOWAM093-08OR822565ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanbetween Alabel and Tjuz-Ashu passes
LOWAM094-08OR822391ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM095-08OR822527ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM096-08OR822499gig9mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts (SW)
LOWAM097-08OR822574gig9mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts (SW)
LOWAM098-08OR822399gig9mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts (SW)
LOWAM099-08OR822461ori8mnemosyneUzbekistanKuraminsky Khrebet
LOWAM100-08OR822560ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanFerganski Khrebet
LOWAM101-08OR822450ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanFerganski Khrebet
LOWAM102-08OR822579ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanFerganski Khrebet
LOWAM103-08OR822550ori1mnemosyneKazakhstanTuraigyr
LOWAM104-08OR822529ori1mnemosyneKazakhstanTuraigyr
LOWAM105-08OR822561ori1mnemosyneKazakhstanTuraigyr
LOWAM106-08OR822485ori8mnemosyneUzbekistanS of Tashkent
LOWAM107-08OR822564gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanSeravshaski Khrebet
LOWAM111-08OR822431ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanNaryn-Too Mts
LOWAM112-08OR822430ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanNaryn-Too Mts
LOWAM115-08OR822592ado1mnemosyneAzerbaijanNakhichevan
LOWAM116-08OR822566ado2mnemosyneIranElburs Mts
LOWAM117-08OR822397ado2mnemosyneIranElburs Mts
LOWAM118-08OR822396mne1mnemosyneRussiaBelgorod Region
LOWAM119-08OR822526mne1mnemosyneRussiaBelgorod Region
LOWAM120-08OR822486mne3mnemosyneRussiaBelgorod Region
LOWAM121-08OR822416mne3mnemosyneRussiaSaratovskaya Oblast
LOWAM122-08OR822542mne3mnemosyneRussiaSaratovskaya Oblast
LOWAM123-08OR822553mne3mnemosyneRussiaSaratovskaya Oblast
LOWAM124-08OR822479ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAk-Muz
LOWAM125-08OR822445ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAk-Muz
LOWAM126-08OR822539gig1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM127-08OR822511gig1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM128-08OR822578gig1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM129-08OR822457gig8mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM130-08OR822575gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM131-08OR822562gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM132-08OR822496gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM133-08OR822488gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts West
LOWAM134-08OR822559gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts West
LOWAM135-08OR822462gig9mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts West
LOWAM136-08OR822451gig3mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts
LOWAM137-08OR822449gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts
LOWAM138-08OR822556gig9mnemosyneUzbekistanGissar Mts
LOWAM139-08OR822434gig9mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts SW
LOWAM140-08OR822473gig2mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts
LOWAM141-08OR822521gig11mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts
LOWAM142-08OR822417ori2mnemosyneKyrgyzstanModatoo Mts
LOWAM143-08OR822402ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanModatoo Mts
LOWAM144-08OR822582ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanModatoo Mts
LOWAM145-08OR822458ori2mnemosyneKyrgyzstanMoldatoo Mts
LOWAM146-08OR822536ori2mnemosyneKyrgyzstanMoldatoo Mts
LOWAM147-08OR822519ori2mnemosyneKyrgyzstanMoldatoo Mts
LOWAM148-08OR822456ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanSongkel Lake
LOWAM149-08OR822464ori9mnemosyneKyrgyzstanSongkel Lake
LOWAM150-08OR822422ori5mnemosyneKyrgyzstanSongkel Lake
LOWAM151-08OR822433ori4mnemosyneKyrgyzstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM152-08OR822409ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM153-08OR822443gig1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM154-08OR822535gig1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM155-08OR822541gig1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanAlai Mts
LOWAM156-08OR822522ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanChychkan
LOWAM157-08OR822410ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanChychkan
LOWAM158-08OR822470ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanChychkan
LOWAM159-08OR822509ori5mnemosyneKazakhstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM160-08OR822455ori5mnemosyneKazakhstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM161-08OR822580ori5mnemosyneKazakhstanKirgizsky Khrebet
LOWAM162-08OR822555ori2mnemosyneKazakhstanKarzhantau Mts
LOWAM163-08OR822483ori1mnemosyneKazakhstanKarzhantau Mts
LOWAM164-08OR822393ori1mnemosyneKazakhstanKarzhantau Mts
LOWAM165-08OR822395gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTaribak
LOWAM166-08OR822583gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTaribak
LOWAM167-08OR822474gig10mnemosyneTajikistanTaribak
LOWAM168-08OR822487gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanNuratau Mts
LOWAM169-08OR822576gig2mnemosyneUzbekistanNuratau Mts
LOWAM170-08OR822497gig10mnemosyneUzbekistanNuratau Mts
LOWAM171-08OR822424gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM172-08OR822429gig2mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM173-08OR822530gig10mnemosyneTajikistanTurkestanski Mts
LOWAM196-09OR822494nub1nubilosusTurkmenistanWest Kopetdagh
LOWAM197-09OR822435nub1nubilosusTurkmenistanWest Kopetdagh
LOWAM198-09OR822540ado3mnemosyneTurkeyTaurus (gory Tavr)
LOWAM199-09OR822513ado3mnemosyneTurkeyTaurus (gory Tavr)
LOWAM200-09OR822584mne5mnemosyneGeorgiaMestia
LOWAM201-09OR822531mne5mnemosyneGeorgiaMestia
LOWAM202-09OR822467mne4mnemosyneRussiaSt. Petersburg region
LOWAM203-09OR822414mne4mnemosyneRussiaSt. Petersburg region
LOWAM205-09OR822512ori1mnemosyneKyrgyzstanKungey-Alatoo Mts
LOWAM206-09OR822441mne4mnemosyneRussiaVologodskaya oblast
LOWAM207-09OR822534gig10mnemosyneTajikistanObihingou
LOWAM208-09OR822504gig8mnemosyneTajikistanPeter The Great Mts
LOWAM209-09OR822412gig2mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts
LOWAM210-09OR822440gig2mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts
LOWAM212-09OR822427gig2mnemosyneTajikistanGissar Mts
LOWAM213-09OR822495gig5mnemosyneTajikistanAlai Mts
BPALB154-16OR822438ado4mnemosyneIsraelHermon
BPALB230-17OR822392gig2mnemosyneTajikistan
BPALB245-17OR822591gig2mnemosyneTajikistan
BPALB258-17OR822442gig1mnemosyneTajikistan
BPALB369-17OR822468gig1mnemosyneTajikistan
BPALB389-17OR822484gig1mnemosyneTajikistan
BPAL2225-13OR822589ado4mnemosyneIsraelN. Israel
BPAL2226-13OR822405ado4mnemosyneIsraelN. Israel
BPAL2794-15OR822572mne8mnemosyneRussiaPskov
BPAL2795-15OR822568mne8mnemosyneRussiaPskov
BPAL3195-16OR822437ado4mnemosyneIsraelHermon
BPAL3196-16OR822489ado4mnemosyneIsraelHermon
BPAL3358-16OR822547ado4mnemosyneIsraelHermon Mt
BPAL2276-13OR822466nor1nordmanniGeorgiaAdzharia
BPAL2277-13OR822573nor1nordmanniGeorgiaAdzharia
BPAL2278-13OR822398nor1nordmanniGeorgiaAdzharia
LOWAM269-11OR822482ari2ariadneKazakhstanWest Altai
LOWAM273-11OR822514ari2ariadneKazakhstanWest Altai
LOWAM287-11OR822407ari1ariadneKazakhstanAltai
LOWAM288-11OR822446ari1ariadneKazakhstanAltai
LOWAM289-11OR822472ari1ariadneKazakhstanAltai
LOWAM290-11OR822400ari1ariadneKazakhstanAltai
LOWAM292-11OR822558ari4ariadneKazakhstanAltai
LOWAM295-11OR822492ari3ariadneKazakhstanAltai
LOWAM296-11OR822569ari3ariadneKazakhstanAltai
LOWAM301-11OR822549ari2ariadne clarusKazakhstanSaur Mts
MA225OR884225ari6ariadne erlikRussiaN of Kosh-Agach

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Figure 1. The Bayesian tree of the Parnassius (Driopa) species based on analysis of the mitochondrial COI barcodes. Numbers at nodes indicate Bayesian posterior probabilities (BPP) (higher than 0.5). Black/red values in the rectangles show the probabilities of the ancestral states “absence of red spots”/“presence of red spots”. Parnassius ariadne erlik is shown in bold. The number before the name of the haplogroup means the number of identified specimens with this haplogroup. The species clusters are highlighted in different colors.
Figure 1. The Bayesian tree of the Parnassius (Driopa) species based on analysis of the mitochondrial COI barcodes. Numbers at nodes indicate Bayesian posterior probabilities (BPP) (higher than 0.5). Black/red values in the rectangles show the probabilities of the ancestral states “absence of red spots”/“presence of red spots”. Parnassius ariadne erlik is shown in bold. The number before the name of the haplogroup means the number of identified specimens with this haplogroup. The species clusters are highlighted in different colors.
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Figure 2. A part of the Bayesian tree of the Parnassius (Driopa) species (Figure 1) showing the structure of P. mnemosyne sensu stricto. The tree is based on an analysis of the mitochondrial COI barcodes. Numbers at nodes indicate Bayesian posterior probabilities (BPP) (higher than 0.5). The number before the name of the haplogroup means the number of identified specimens with this haplogroup. The subspecies clusters are highlighted in different colors.
Figure 2. A part of the Bayesian tree of the Parnassius (Driopa) species (Figure 1) showing the structure of P. mnemosyne sensu stricto. The tree is based on an analysis of the mitochondrial COI barcodes. Numbers at nodes indicate Bayesian posterior probabilities (BPP) (higher than 0.5). The number before the name of the haplogroup means the number of identified specimens with this haplogroup. The subspecies clusters are highlighted in different colors.
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Figure 3. The TCS haplotype network of the samples of the western lineage of the P. mnemosyne species complex. The species and subspecies clusters are highlighted in different colors. Geographic data for the studied haplotypes are presented in Appendix A.
Figure 3. The TCS haplotype network of the samples of the western lineage of the P. mnemosyne species complex. The species and subspecies clusters are highlighted in different colors. Geographic data for the studied haplotypes are presented in Appendix A.
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Figure 4. Schematic representation of the ranges of P. mnemosyne, P. turatii, P. nubilosus stat. nov., and P. ariadne. The western part of the range of P. stubbendorfii is also shown in blue to demonstrate overlap with the distribution area of P. ariadne. Number 1 indicates geographic isolates of P. mnemosyne mnemosyne. Number 2 indicates geographic isolates of P. turatii. Number 3 indicates geographic isolates of P. mnemosyne adolphi.
Figure 4. Schematic representation of the ranges of P. mnemosyne, P. turatii, P. nubilosus stat. nov., and P. ariadne. The western part of the range of P. stubbendorfii is also shown in blue to demonstrate overlap with the distribution area of P. ariadne. Number 1 indicates geographic isolates of P. mnemosyne mnemosyne. Number 2 indicates geographic isolates of P. turatii. Number 3 indicates geographic isolates of P. mnemosyne adolphi.
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Figure 5. Parnassius nubilosus (AD), P. turatii (E,F), and P. mnemosyne mnemosyne (G,H). The white band in the apical transparent part of the forewings is shown by black arrows. The additional small black streak on the discal cell of the forewing is shown by the blue arrow. All specimens are from the collection of the. Zoological Institute, St. Petersburg. Scale = 1 cm. (A,B) P. nubilosus, males, Turkmenistan, Kopetdagh, Dushak Mt, 6 June 1986, V.Dubatolov leg. (C,D) P. nubilosus, females, Turkmenistan, Kopetdagh, Dushak Mt, 6 June 1986, V.Dubatolov leg. (E) P. turatii, male, Italy, Sicilia, Madonie, 1200’, 15 July 1910, coll. Krüger, mus. Turati E, coll. Avinov. (F) P. turatii, female, Italy, Sicilia, Madonie, 1200’, 15 July 1910, coll. Krüger, mus. Turati E, coll. Avinov. (G) P. mnemosyne mnemosyne, male, sample J178, Russia, Kaluga region, 27 May 1979, leg. I. Sokolov. (H) P. mnemosyne mnemosyne, female, Russia, Penza region, Serdobsk, 20 May 2008, leg. Polumordvinov.
Figure 5. Parnassius nubilosus (AD), P. turatii (E,F), and P. mnemosyne mnemosyne (G,H). The white band in the apical transparent part of the forewings is shown by black arrows. The additional small black streak on the discal cell of the forewing is shown by the blue arrow. All specimens are from the collection of the. Zoological Institute, St. Petersburg. Scale = 1 cm. (A,B) P. nubilosus, males, Turkmenistan, Kopetdagh, Dushak Mt, 6 June 1986, V.Dubatolov leg. (C,D) P. nubilosus, females, Turkmenistan, Kopetdagh, Dushak Mt, 6 June 1986, V.Dubatolov leg. (E) P. turatii, male, Italy, Sicilia, Madonie, 1200’, 15 July 1910, coll. Krüger, mus. Turati E, coll. Avinov. (F) P. turatii, female, Italy, Sicilia, Madonie, 1200’, 15 July 1910, coll. Krüger, mus. Turati E, coll. Avinov. (G) P. mnemosyne mnemosyne, male, sample J178, Russia, Kaluga region, 27 May 1979, leg. I. Sokolov. (H) P. mnemosyne mnemosyne, female, Russia, Penza region, Serdobsk, 20 May 2008, leg. Polumordvinov.
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Figure 6. Parnassius mnemosyne adolphi (A,B), P. mnemosyne gigantea (C,D), P. mnemosyne falsa (E,F), and P. ariadne (GI). The white band in the apical transparent part of the forewings is shown by arrows. All specimens are from the collection of the Zoological Institute, St. Petersburg. Scale = 1 cm. (A) P. mnemosyne adolphi, male, sample J115, Azerbaijan, Nakhichevan, Njus-Njus vill., Sary-Dara Mt, 2300 m, 7 July 1984, V.A.Lukhtanov leg. (B) P. mnemosyne adolphi, female, Transcaucasus, distr. Zangezur, loc. Litshk (prope Megri), 6 June 1910, E.Miller leg. (C) P. mnemosyne gigantea, male, Uzbekistan, Gissar Mts, 50 km east of Shakhrisyabz, 1700–2300 m, 19 May 1994, N.Kandul leg. (D) P. mnemosyne gigantea, female, (Kyrgyzstan), Alai Mts, Kok-Su, Kosh-Tjube, 3300 m, 28 July 1964, Bundel leg. (E) P. mnemosyne falsa, male, sample J112, Kyrgyzstan, Naryn-Too Range, 29–30 July 1995, V.Shchurov leg. (F) P. mnemosyne falsa, female, Kyrgyzstan, Kyrgyz Ala-Too Range, Uzyngyr, 2500 m, 13 July 1974, V.V. Dubatolov leg. (G) P. ariadne, male, Kazakhstan, Saur Mts, Zhanaturmys, 1100 m, 4 June 1987, V.A.Lukhtanov leg. (H) P. ariadne, male, Kazakhstan, S Altai, Kurtchum Mts, Kalinino, 22 June 1985, V.A.Lukhtanov leg. (I) P. ariadne, female, Kazakhstan, S Altai, Markakol Lake, Urunkhaika, 1700 m, 24 June 1983, V.A.Lukhtanov leg.
Figure 6. Parnassius mnemosyne adolphi (A,B), P. mnemosyne gigantea (C,D), P. mnemosyne falsa (E,F), and P. ariadne (GI). The white band in the apical transparent part of the forewings is shown by arrows. All specimens are from the collection of the Zoological Institute, St. Petersburg. Scale = 1 cm. (A) P. mnemosyne adolphi, male, sample J115, Azerbaijan, Nakhichevan, Njus-Njus vill., Sary-Dara Mt, 2300 m, 7 July 1984, V.A.Lukhtanov leg. (B) P. mnemosyne adolphi, female, Transcaucasus, distr. Zangezur, loc. Litshk (prope Megri), 6 June 1910, E.Miller leg. (C) P. mnemosyne gigantea, male, Uzbekistan, Gissar Mts, 50 km east of Shakhrisyabz, 1700–2300 m, 19 May 1994, N.Kandul leg. (D) P. mnemosyne gigantea, female, (Kyrgyzstan), Alai Mts, Kok-Su, Kosh-Tjube, 3300 m, 28 July 1964, Bundel leg. (E) P. mnemosyne falsa, male, sample J112, Kyrgyzstan, Naryn-Too Range, 29–30 July 1995, V.Shchurov leg. (F) P. mnemosyne falsa, female, Kyrgyzstan, Kyrgyz Ala-Too Range, Uzyngyr, 2500 m, 13 July 1974, V.V. Dubatolov leg. (G) P. ariadne, male, Kazakhstan, Saur Mts, Zhanaturmys, 1100 m, 4 June 1987, V.A.Lukhtanov leg. (H) P. ariadne, male, Kazakhstan, S Altai, Kurtchum Mts, Kalinino, 22 June 1985, V.A.Lukhtanov leg. (I) P. ariadne, female, Kazakhstan, S Altai, Markakol Lake, Urunkhaika, 1700 m, 24 June 1983, V.A.Lukhtanov leg.
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Figure 7. Male genitalia of P. nubilosus (A,B, sample J086) and P. mnemosyne adolphi (A,C, sample J115). (A,C), lateral view; left valve removed. (B,D), left valva. (A,B), Turkmenistan, Kopetdagh, Ai-Dere, 1 April 1979, Ju.Ya.Sokolova leg. (C,D), Azerbaijan, Nakhichevan, Njus-Njus vill., Sary-Dara Mt, 2300 m, 7 July 1984, V.A.Lukhtanov leg.
Figure 7. Male genitalia of P. nubilosus (A,B, sample J086) and P. mnemosyne adolphi (A,C, sample J115). (A,C), lateral view; left valve removed. (B,D), left valva. (A,B), Turkmenistan, Kopetdagh, Ai-Dere, 1 April 1979, Ju.Ya.Sokolova leg. (C,D), Azerbaijan, Nakhichevan, Njus-Njus vill., Sary-Dara Mt, 2300 m, 7 July 1984, V.A.Lukhtanov leg.
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Figure 8. Sphragis of females of P. nubilosus (A,B), P. mnemosyne falsa (C), P. mnemosyne adolphi (D), P. mnemosyne gigantea (E), P. mnemosyne mnemosyne (F), P. turatii (G), and P. ariadne (H). All specimens are from the collection of the Zoological Institute, St. Petersburg. (A,B) Turkmenistan, Kopetdagh, Dushak Mt, 6 June 1986, V.Dubatolov leg. (C) Kyrgyzstan, Kyrgyz Ala-Too Range, Uzyngyr, 2500 m, 13 July 1974, V.V. Dubatolov leg. (D) Transcaucasus, distr. Zangezur, loc. Litshk (prope Megri), 6 June 1910, E.Miller leg. (E) (Kyrgyzstan), Alai Mts, Kok-Su, Kosh-Tjube, 3300 m, 28 July 1964, Bundel leg. (F) Russia, Penza region, Serdobsk, 20 May 2008, leg. Polumordvinov. (G) Italy, Sicilia, Madonie, 1200’, 15 July 1910, coll. Krüger, mus. Turati E, coll. Avinov. (H) Kazakhstan, S Altai, Kurtchum Mts, Kalinino, 7 June 1986, V.A.Lukhtanov leg.
Figure 8. Sphragis of females of P. nubilosus (A,B), P. mnemosyne falsa (C), P. mnemosyne adolphi (D), P. mnemosyne gigantea (E), P. mnemosyne mnemosyne (F), P. turatii (G), and P. ariadne (H). All specimens are from the collection of the Zoological Institute, St. Petersburg. (A,B) Turkmenistan, Kopetdagh, Dushak Mt, 6 June 1986, V.Dubatolov leg. (C) Kyrgyzstan, Kyrgyz Ala-Too Range, Uzyngyr, 2500 m, 13 July 1974, V.V. Dubatolov leg. (D) Transcaucasus, distr. Zangezur, loc. Litshk (prope Megri), 6 June 1910, E.Miller leg. (E) (Kyrgyzstan), Alai Mts, Kok-Su, Kosh-Tjube, 3300 m, 28 July 1964, Bundel leg. (F) Russia, Penza region, Serdobsk, 20 May 2008, leg. Polumordvinov. (G) Italy, Sicilia, Madonie, 1200’, 15 July 1910, coll. Krüger, mus. Turati E, coll. Avinov. (H) Kazakhstan, S Altai, Kurtchum Mts, Kalinino, 7 June 1986, V.A.Lukhtanov leg.
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Figure 9. Lectotype of Parnassius mnemosyne var. nubilosus Christoph, 1873 (Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg). Scale = 1 cm. See the text for explanation of the labels.
Figure 9. Lectotype of Parnassius mnemosyne var. nubilosus Christoph, 1873 (Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg). Scale = 1 cm. See the text for explanation of the labels.
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Figure 10. Lectotype of Doritis clarius Eversmann, 1843 (= Parnassius ariadne (Lederer, 1853)) (Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, catalogue number: INS_LEP_0000666). Scale = 1 cm.
Figure 10. Lectotype of Doritis clarius Eversmann, 1843 (= Parnassius ariadne (Lederer, 1853)) (Zoological Institute, Russian Academy of Sciences, St. Petersburg, catalogue number: INS_LEP_0000666). Scale = 1 cm.
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Table 1. Minimum COI p-distances (%) between the taxa of the subgenus Driopa. Taxon names are given in full (left column) or as abbreviations (first row).
Table 1. Minimum COI p-distances (%) between the taxa of the subgenus Driopa. Taxon names are given in full (left column) or as abbreviations (first row).
origigmneadonubturaristuhoeglacloevenor
falsa0
gigantea1.22
mnemosyne0.920.92
adolphi2.452.452.14
nubilosus2.912.292.603.52
turatii3.242.932.783.702.78
ariadne3.373.673.363.063.523.55
stubbendorfii4.744.434.745.354.284.175.05
hoenei5.095.094.785.253.704.325.254.01
glacialis6.295.986.296.765.666.517.084.386.03
clodius3.523.523.823.823.983.863.823.814.785.94
eversmanni3.983.673.673.983.523.863.983.654.465.481.98
nordmanni5.585.895.586.364.815.435.435.125.747.184.344.650
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Lukhtanov, V.A.; Zakharov, E.V. Taxonomic Structure and Wing Pattern Evolution in the Parnassius mnemosyne Species Complex (Lepidoptera, Papilionidae). Insects 2023, 14, 942. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects14120942

AMA Style

Lukhtanov VA, Zakharov EV. Taxonomic Structure and Wing Pattern Evolution in the Parnassius mnemosyne Species Complex (Lepidoptera, Papilionidae). Insects. 2023; 14(12):942. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects14120942

Chicago/Turabian Style

Lukhtanov, Vladimir A., and Evgeny V. Zakharov. 2023. "Taxonomic Structure and Wing Pattern Evolution in the Parnassius mnemosyne Species Complex (Lepidoptera, Papilionidae)" Insects 14, no. 12: 942. https://doi.org/10.3390/insects14120942

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