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Keywords = copulation clamps

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24 pages, 5539 KB  
Article
Four New Species of Haplocauda, with Notes on the Evolutionary Convergence of Copulation Clamps in Lucidotini (Coleoptera: Lampyridae: Lampyrinae)
by Leandro Zeballos, Luiz Felipe Lima da Silveira and Cláudio Ruy Vasconcelos da Fonseca
Insects 2025, 16(8), 824; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects16080824 - 8 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1654
Abstract
Lampyrinae Lucidotini contains nearly a third of the world’s Lampyridae. The lack of revisions and the overlap of diagnostic features across taxonomic levels have hindered identification and, therefore, further studies of Lucidotini taxa. The use of terminalia and genital traits in Lucidotini phylogenies [...] Read more.
Lampyrinae Lucidotini contains nearly a third of the world’s Lampyridae. The lack of revisions and the overlap of diagnostic features across taxonomic levels have hindered identification and, therefore, further studies of Lucidotini taxa. The use of terminalia and genital traits in Lucidotini phylogenies has been fundamental to inform and update the genus-level delimitations in this group. One important open question is whether the presence of increased-length abdominal segment VIII (in relation to segment VII) in the closely related genera Scissicauda and Haplocauda is synapomorphic or homoplastic. In recent collecting efforts combined with studies of specimens deposited in different scientific collections, we found specimens hypothesized as four new firefly species from the Amazon basin that share the unique characteristics of the male abdomen of Haplocauda species. To test the hypothesis that these new species are monophyletic and sisters to Haplocauda species, and that the augmented segment VIII is synapomorphic to Scissicauda + Haplocauda, we ran phylogenetic analyses building upon a pre-existing character matrix, including a wide sample of Lucidotini and neighboring branches. Our results support the placement of the four new species described here (H. lata sp. nov., H. amazonensis sp. nov., H. aculeata sp. nov. and H. antimary sp. nov.) in Haplocauda. Importantly, one species with regular-sized segment VIII sclerites was recovered as the earliest diverging lineages of Haplocauda, suggesting that segment VIII was augmented at least twice in the Lucidotini—the other one being within Scissicauda. We also report, for the first time, a sympatry between Haplocauda species. We revised the definition of Haplocauda and updated the distribution of H. mendesi and the existing key to species. Full article
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43 pages, 8380 KB  
Article
An Overview of the Firefly Genus Pygoluciola Wittmer, a Phylogeny of the Luciolinae Using Mitochondrial Genomes, a Description of Six New Species, and an Assessment of a Copulation Clamp in This Genus (Coleoptera: Lampyridae: Luciolinae)
by Xinhua Fu and Lesley Ballantyne
Insects 2025, 16(4), 394; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects16040394 - 8 Apr 2025
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 2490
Abstract
Pygoluciola Wittmer 1939 is overviewed, with an expanded generic redescription comprising 28 species, including 6 new species from China, described from features of males, associated females, and larvae. Their placement in the genus is confirmed by a phylogenetic analysis of their mitogenomes. They [...] Read more.
Pygoluciola Wittmer 1939 is overviewed, with an expanded generic redescription comprising 28 species, including 6 new species from China, described from features of males, associated females, and larvae. Their placement in the genus is confirmed by a phylogenetic analysis of their mitogenomes. They include Pygoluciola baise Fu & Ballantyne sp. nov. from Baise City, Guangxi Province; P. manmaia Fu & Ballantyne sp. nov. from Yunnan Province; P. quzhou Fu & Ballantyne sp. nov. from the City of Quzhou in Zhejiang Province; P. tunchangia Fu & Ballantyne sp. nov. from Tunchang county, Hainan Island; P. yingjiangia Fu & Ballantyne sp. nov. from Yingjiang county in Yunnan Province; and P. yupingia Fu & Ballantyne sp. nov. from Mt. Yuping, Hongya County in Sichuan Province. Specimens are assigned to Luciola davidis Olivier, which is transferred to Pygoluciola and redescribed. Species are assigned to one of five Groups we define in the genus, and this classification is challenged by molecular information. We reject the possibility of a copulation clamp in P. kinabalua Ballantyne by dissection of pinned type females and comparison with other species newly described here. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Revival of a Prominent Taxonomy of Insects)
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26 pages, 8019 KB  
Article
Haplocauda, a New Genus of Fireflies Endemic to the Amazon Rainforest (Coleoptera: Lampyridae)
by Luiz Felipe Lima da Silveira, William Lima, Cláudio Ruy Vasconcelos da Fonseca and Joseph McHugh
Insects 2022, 13(1), 58; https://doi.org/10.3390/insects13010058 - 5 Jan 2022
Cited by 13 | Viewed by 5536
Abstract
Most firefly genera have poorly defined taxonomic boundaries, especially in the Neotropics, where they are more diverse and more difficult to identify. Recent advances that shed light on the diversity of fireflies in South America have focused mainly on Atlantic Rainforest taxa, whereas [...] Read more.
Most firefly genera have poorly defined taxonomic boundaries, especially in the Neotropics, where they are more diverse and more difficult to identify. Recent advances that shed light on the diversity of fireflies in South America have focused mainly on Atlantic Rainforest taxa, whereas lampyrids in other biomes remained largely unstudied. We found three new firefly species endemic to the Amazon basin that share unique traits of the male abdomen where sternum VIII and the pygidium are modified and likely work as a copulation clamp. Here we test and confirm the hypothesis that these three species form a monophyletic lineage and propose Haplocauda gen. nov. to accommodate the three new species. Both maximum parsimony and probabilistic (Bayesian and maximum likelihood) phylogenetic analyses confirmed Haplocauda gen. nov. monophyly, and consistently recovered it as the sister group to Scissicauda, fireflies endemic to the Atlantic Rainforest that also feature a copulation clamp on abdominal segment VIII, although with a different configuration. We provide illustrations, diagnostic descriptions, and keys to species based on males and females. The three new species were sampled from different regions, and are likely allopatric, a common pattern among Amazonian taxa. Full article
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