TL;DR: A phylogeny for the endemic Hawaiian Lepidoptera genus Thyrocopa is presented, which has two flightless species that occur in alpine areas on Maui and Hawaii islands, in order to determine whether theFlightless species are sister to each other or represent separate losses of flight.
Abstract: Aim Although the ability to fly confers benefits to most insects, some taxa have become secondarily flightless. Insect flightlessness may be more likely to evolve in environments such as islands and other windswept and alpine areas, but this prediction has rarely been tested while controlling for phylogenetic effects. Here we present a phylogeny for the endemic Hawaiian Lepidoptera genus Thyrocopa, which has two flightless species that occur in alpine areas on Maui and Hawaii islands, in order to determine whether the flightless species are sister to each other or represent separate losses of flight. We also explore divergence times and biogeographic patterns of inter-island colonization in Thyrocopa, and present the first Hawaiian study to sample a genus from nine islands.
TL;DR: A new species of brachypterous, flightless, jumping alpine Thyrocopa moth, T. kikaelekea, is described from Hawaii Island and is hypothesized not to be the sister taxon to T. apatela, but instead representing an independent loss of flight.
Abstract: A new species of brachypterous, flightless, jumping alpine Thyrocopa moth, T. kikaelekea, is described from Hawaii Island. This new species is similar to T. apatela (Walsingham), another flightless species from Maui Island. Thyrocopa kikaelekea is hypothesized not to be the sister taxon to T. apatela, instead representing an independent loss of flight.
TL;DR: In males of Thyrocopa apatela, jump distance was significantly correlated with the maximum horizontal component of jump velocity, suggesting jumping ability may become enhanced as a means of evading predators when selection for flight performance is relaxed under high-wind regimes.
Abstract: Saltatorial locomotion has evolved multiple times in flightless Lepidop - tera, particularly on oceanic islands and in habitats with high winds. The kinematics of this behavior are unknown but are clearly relevant to escape performance in the absence of wings. We investigated jumping in two non-sister species of bra- chypterous Hawaiian moths (genus Thyrocopa). Moths were collected from the islands of Maui and Hawaii. Lateral views of jumps were recorded on video and then digitized. Jump distances of both species averaged about ten body lengths. In males of Thyrocopa apatela, jump distance was significantly correlated with the maximum horizontal component of jump velocity. Jumping ability may become enhanced as a means of evading predators when selection for flight performance is relaxed under high-wind regimes.
TL;DR: The results suggest that, for Thyrocopa, neither dispersal ability nor biotic interactions play a major role in limiting present distributions, and niche conservatism associated with the availability of suitable environmental conditions in a habitat appears to dictate the distribution of these moths.
Abstract: For any lineage, colonization of a new habitat is dictated by the combined constraints of geography, or the ability to reach the new area through dispersal; the presence of other organisms; and the physiological ability to adapt to novel environmental conditions. Many studies have shown the importance of niche conservatism, although, in most of these, the geographical impediments have been relatively minor. Here, we examine the interplay between dispersal, biotic interactions, and adaptation in shaping the biogeography of a lineage in which both geography and environmental conditions in particular present substantial filters. Thyrocopa is a genus of generalist wood-feeding moths endemic to the Hawaiian Islands. Within the group, species are generally restricted to either wet forest, or dry, rocky, windy habitats. We sampled Thyrocopa from throughout the Hawaiian Islands, and performed phylogenetic analyses, likely ancestral area reconstruction, estimation of dates of divergence, and an ecological niche modeling analysis. We show that within the ‘windswept’ clade of Thyrocopa, species diversified between suitable habitats in the southeastern islands long after the northwestern Hawaiian Islands eroded to their current dry, rocky, windy state. Later, Thyrocopa back-colonized the northwestern islands despite having to cross long distances over open ocean. Dates of diversification are independently supported by two methods of dating nodes (a molecular clock as well as estimates based on calibration points). Our results suggest that, for Thyrocopa, neither dispersal ability nor biotic interactions play a major role in limiting present distributions. Instead, niche conservatism associated with the availability of suitable environmental conditions in a habitat appears to dictate the distribution of these moths.
TL;DR: Two new endemic Hawai'ian Lepidoptera species are described and one is endemic to Moloka'i island and the other is a pollinator of the rare endemic plant Schiedea kaalae Wawra.
Abstract: Two new endemic Hawai'ian Lepidoptera species are herein described. The first, Pseudoschrankia brevipalpis sp. nov., is a pollinator of the rare endemic plant Schiedea kaalae Wawra. The second, Thyrocopa keliae sp. nov., is endemic to Moloka'i island. Observations of undescribed parasitic mites that attack Hawai'ian Lepidoptera are presented as well.