TL;DR: Comparing asymmetry patterns in wing morphology in populations of two Euchloe butterfly species across their opposing ranges in Israel concludes that accounting for differences in species’ life histories and range-limiting factors is necessary to better predict patterns of developmental instability across spatial and environmental gradients.
TL;DR: Two new European species of Cotesia are described and illustrated and it is proposed that C. acutula (Tobias) is a junior synonym of C. cajae (Bouché).
Abstract: Two new European species of Cotesia are described and illustrated. One (C. euchloevora Shaw, sp. nov.) was reared from Euchloe species and close relatives and also Aplocera efformata, and the other (C. parnassii Shaw, sp. nov.) was reared from Parnassius phoebus. Notes are given to distinguish them from congeners. The DNA barcodes of C. euchloevora are discussed in relation to similar barcodes for another, but morphologically clearly distinct, species Cotesia pilicornis (Thomson). Unrelated to this, it is proposed that C. acutula (Tobias) is a junior synonym of C. cajae (Bouché).
TL;DR: A molecular investigation of Nearctic Euchloe species presents the results of a molecular investigation (mtDNA: COI) of the hitherto accepted species, finding that E. olympia is distinct according to both phenotype and genetic features and E. ausonides is supported as a discrete species.
Abstract: . This work presents the results of a molecular investigation (mtDNA: COI) of Nearctic Euchloe species. The five hitherto accepted species, E. creusa (Doubleday & Hewitson, 1847), E. hyantis (W.H. Edwards, 1871), E. guaymasensis Opler, 1986, E. olympia (W.H. Edwards, 1871), and E. ausonides (Lucas, 1852), are supported. They are part of the species groups II and V of the existing phylogeny of Palaearctic Euchloe species (Back et al. 2008). The subspecies so far described, as well as additional populations with respect to ecology and phenotype, show no or little sequence divergences and we conclude that these represent intraspecific variation. This lack of divergence appears for members of the Euchloe hyantis complex where we assert that biological and phenotypic characters indicate that species-level isolation has been attained for E. hyantis, E. lotta Beutenmuller, 1898 and E. andrewsi Martin, 1936, respectively. Interestingly, there are also no differences between Nearctic and Siberian populatio...