TL;DR: The phylogeny of Staphyliniformia is reconstructed using DNA sequences from nuclear 28S rDNA and the nuclear protein‐coding gene CAD for 282 species representing all living families and most subfamilies, with a representative sample of Scarabaeiformia serving as a near outgroup, and three additional beetles as more distant outgroups.
Abstract: The beetle series Staphyliniformia exhibits extraordinary taxonomic, ecological and morphological diversity. To gain further insight into staphyliniform relationships and evolution, we reconstructed the phylogeny of Staphyliniformia using DNA sequences from nuclear 28S rDNA and the nuclear protein-coding gene CAD for 282 species representing all living families and most subfamilies, a representative sample of Scarabaeiformia serving as a near outgroup, and three additional beetles as more distant outgroups. Under both Bayesian inference (BI) and maximum likelihood inference (MLI), the major taxa within Staphyliniformia are each monophyletic: (i) Staphylinoidea, (ii) Hydrophiloidea s.l., and the contained superfamilies (iii) Hydrophiloidea s.s. and (iv) Histeroidea, although Staphylinoidea and Hydrophiloidea s.l. are not strongly supported by MLI bootstrap. Scarabaeiformia is monophyletic under both methods of phylogenetic inference. However, the relative relationships of Staphylinoidea, Hydrophiloidea s.l. and Scarabaeiformia differ between BI and MLI: under BI, Staphyliniformia and Scarabaeiformia were sister groups; under MLI, Hydrophiloidea s.l. and Scarabaeiformia were sister groups and these together were sister to Staphylinoidea. The internal relationships in Scarabaeiformia were similar under both methods of phylogenetic inference, with Cetoniinae, Dynastinae + Rutelinae, Hybosoridae, Passalidae, Scarabaeidae and Scarabaeinae recovered as monophyla. Histeridae comprised two major clades: (1) Abraeinae, Trypanaeine and Trypeticinae; and (2) Chlamydopsinae, Dendrophilinae, Haeteriinae, Histerinae, Onthophilinae, Saprininae and Tribalinae. The relationships among early-divergent Hydrophiloidea differed between BI and MLI, and overall were unresolved or received only moderate to low nodal support. The staphylinoid families Agyrtidae, Hydraenidae and Ptiliidae were recovered as monophyletic; the latter two were sister taxa, and Staphylinidae + Silphidae was also monophyletic. Silphidae was placed within Staphylinidae in close relation to a subset of Tachyporinae. Pselaphinae and Scydmaeninae were both recovered within Staphylinidae, in accordance with recent analyses of morphological characters, although not always with recently proposed sister taxa. None of the four major groups of Staphylinidae proposed by Lawrence and Newton (1982) was recovered as monophyletic. Certain highly specialized staphyliniform habits and morphologies, such as abdominal defensive glands and reduced elytra, have arisen in parallel in separate lineages. Further, our analyses support two major transitions to an aquatic lifestyle within Staphyliniformia: once within Staphylinoidea (Hydraenidae), and once within Hydrophiloidea s.l. (Hydrophiloidea s.s.). On a smaller scale, the most common transition is from litter to subcortical or to periaquatic microhabitats and the next most common is from litter to carrion and to fungi. Overall, transitions to periaquatic microhabitats were the most numerous. The broad picture in Staphyliniformia seems to be a high level of evolutionary plasticity, with multiple possible pathways to and from many microhabitat associations, and litter as a major source microhabitat for diversification. In Scarabaeiformia, the most common transitions were from litter to foliage, with flowers to litter, litter to flowers, and litter to dung being next, and then litter to roots, logs or carrion. Litter is again the largest overall source microhabitat. The most common transitions were to foliage and flowers. It thus seems that the litter environment presents ecological and evolutionary opportunities/challenges that facilitate entry of Staphyliniformia and Scarabaeiformia into ‘new’ and different ecological adaptive zones.
TL;DR: In this article, a revision of the superfamily Histeroidea of Japan is presented, which includes 6 new species, Hypocaccus akanensis, Platylomalus kusuii, Anap/eus nakanei, A. nomurai and Epierus uenoi.
Abstract: OHARA, M. 1994. A revision of the superfamily Histeroidea of Japan [Coleoptera]. Ins. matsum. n. s. 51: 283 pp., 166 figs., 42 tabs. The Japanese species of the superfamily Histeroidea are revised. A historical review shows that 113 species of the superfamily, including 6 species newly described and 2 species newly recorded in this revision, are known to occur in the Japanese territory including small islands in the Pacific Ocean. Morphology of external structures and their terms are presented. \"Wenzel-Mazur System\" is criticized from a phylogenetic viewpoint, and another cladogram is constructed for the subfamilies of the Histeridae. The 6 new species are Hypocaccus akanensis, Platylomalus kusuii, Anap/eus nakanei, A. nomurai, A. hagai, and Epierus uenoi. Gnathoncus communis (Marseul) and Chaetabraeus cohaeres (Lewis) are newly recorded. Boreochlamydus ohtanii is transferred into the genus
TL;DR: It is recommended that series names are eliminated from the classification of Polyphaga, at least for the more ‘primitive’ groups, and poor resolution at the base of the trees and the placement of some nonstaphyliniform taxa as a sister group to a clade comprising Scarabaeoidea, Hydrophiloidea and HisteroideA suggests that Staphyl iniformia may be paraphyletic.
Abstract: . One hundred and twenty-one morphological characters of larvae and adults of the series Staphyliniformia were scored (multistate coding) and analysed to determine the family group relationships of the polyphagan groups Scarabaeoidea, Histeroidea, Hydrophiloidea and Staphylinoidea. Cladograms were rooted with exemplars of Adephaga, Archostemata, Myxophaga and the polyphagan families Dascillidae, Derodontidae, Eucinetidae and Scirtidae. Analyses of the same dataset with multistate characters re-coded as presence/absence (144 characters) produced cladograms that were similar to those produced from analyses of the original characters. Cladograms produced from partitioned larval and adult characters differed strongly, with adult-only trees more similar to those produced by combined data. The results confirm the monophyly of Hydrophiloidea + Histeroidea and of Staphylinoidea (including Hydraenidae). The Epimetopidae + Georissidae are the only strongly supported clade within Hydrophiloidea. A clade comprising Hydrochidae, Spercheidae and Hydrophilidae, and a sister-group relationship between the latter two families were confirmed in analyses of the data with presence/absence coding. Helophoridae, Epimetopidae and Georissidae are probably not a monophyletic unit, and additional evidence is needed for a reliable placement of Helophoridae. Scarabaeoidea are placed as a sister taxon of Hydrophiloidea + Histeroidea, but support for this relationship is weak. The branching pattern ((Hydraenidae + Ptiliidae) + (Leiodidae + Agyrtidae)), and a clade comprising Scydmaenidae, Silphidae and Staphylinidae (= ‘staphylinid group’) are well founded. The branching pattern (Orchymontiinae + (Prosthetopinae + (Ochthebiinae + Hydraeninae))) within Hydraenidae is confirmed. Poor resolution at the base of the trees and the placement of some nonstaphyliniform taxa (Dascillidae, Derodontidae, Scirtidae and Eucinetidae) as a sister group to a clade comprising Scarabaeoidea, Hydrophiloidea and Histeroidea suggests that Staphyliniformia may be paraphyletic. It is recommended that series names are eliminated from the classification of Polyphaga, at least for the more ‘primitive’ groups.
TL;DR: This study is the first to utilize either larval or molecular (18S rDNA) data in combination with adult morphology in an attempt to resolve the phylogeny of the Histeridae, finding the cylindrical, subcortical forms of the family to be the most primitive.
TL;DR: The systematic concept of the superfamily Hydrophiloidea, the interrelationships of subgroups, and the affinities with Histeroidea were discussed controversially in older and more recent studies.
Abstract: series Staphyliniformia (Lawrence & Newton 1995, Hansen 1997a) and comprises about 2400 described species (Hansen 1991). Adults are found in aquatic, semiaquatic, or terrestrial habitats, and some representatives of the subfamily Sphaeridiinae have specialised on life in dung or decaying matters (Hansen 1997b). In most cases, larvae are found in the same environment as the adults. However the feeding habits differ considerably. Adults rely on various sorts of plant material, mainly decaying tissue (Hansen 1997b), whereas larvae of most subgroups are carnivorous (Böving & Henriksen 1938, Bertrand 1972, Hansen 1997b). A sister group relationship between Histeroidea and Hydrophiloidea was postulated by Hansen (1997a). However, the life styles of both groups are clearly different. All stages of Histeroidea are terrestrial and the adults are predominantly or exclusively predacious (Hansen 1997b). Hydrophiloid larvae hatch from a silk cocoon whereas eggs are deposited uncovered by histeroid females. The larvae of both groups are carnivorous and develop fast. However, histeroid larvae seem to be specialized on maggots (Newton 1991), a food preference which is also found in some sphaeridiines but not in other groups of Hydrophiloidea. The systematic concept of the superfamily Hydrophiloidea, the interrelationships of subgroups, and the affinities with Histeroidea were discussed controversially in older and more recent studies (Böving & Craighead 1931, Crowson 1955, Lawrence & Newton 1982, 1995, Hansen 1991, 1997a, Beutel 1994, Archangelsky 1998). The phylogenetic analyses presented by Hansen (1991, 1997a) are based on many external features of adults and some external characters of larvae. External features of immature stages were also described and analysed by Archangelsky (1997, 1998). Internal features of larvae (and adults)