Wednesday, December 12, 2001 -
D0535

Phylogenetic analysis of the New World Phanaeini (Scarabaeidae: Scarabaeinae): Hypotheses on relationships and origins

T. Keith Philips, Western Kentucky University, Department of Biology, 1 Big Red Way, Bowling Green, KY, W. D. Edmonds, California State Polytechnic University, Department of Biological Sciences, 3801 West Temple Ave, Pomona, CA, and Clarke H. Scholtz, University of Pretoria, Department of Zoology and Entomology, Hatfield, Pretoria, Gauteng, South Africa.

A phylogenetic analysis of Phanaeini based on 137 morphological characters supports the hypothesis that the nine included genera, Coprophanaeus, Dendropaemon, Diabroctis, Homalotarsus, Megatharsis, Oxysternon, Phanaeus, Sulcophanaeus and Tetrameira, form a monophyletic clade. Monophyly is unaffected by the inclusion of Gromphas, Oruscatus, and Bolbites and these should also be considered phanaeines. The sister clade is Ennearabdus (Eucraniini) and both evolved from ancestral Dichotomiini within South America. There is no support for any close relationship with the Onitini or with any other remaining tribe. All phanaeine genera appear to be monophyletic except Sulcophanaeus, of which two species groups appear as sister taxa while the remaining three form an independent paraphyletic clade. Ancestral phanaeines were coprophagous with necophagy evolving at least twice. Myrmecophily is also derived and most likely evolved only once in the common ancestor of Dendropaemon, Tetramereia and also probably Megatharsis and Homalotarsus. Bare dung ball construction for larval development is also the most likely ancestral condition with a soil covering on the exterior ball surface and parental cooperation evolving in the more derived lineages.

Species 1: Coleoptera Scarabaeidae (phanaeine dung beetles)
Keywords: evolution

The ESA 2001 Annual Meeting - 2001: An Entomological Odyssey of ESA