TY - JOUR
T1 - Identification and reproductive isolation of Euborellia species (Insecta, Dermaptera, Anisolabididae) from East and Southeast Asia
AU - Kamimura, Yoshitaka
AU - Lee, Chow Yang
AU - Yamasako, Junsuke
AU - Nishikawa, Masaru
N1 - Funding Information:
We thank H.-S. Tee, L.-H. Ang, C.-C. Lee, and X.-Y. Goh for assistance in collecting specimens in the field, and C. Girod and N. Moulin for providing us with important material collected in an inventory for the Conservatoire du Littoral (French coastal protection agency). We also thank W.-J. Wu, C.-C. Scotty Yang, H. Karube, and K. Watanabe for their assistance with examining specimens preserved in NTU and KPMNH. We are grateful also to C. Girod and P. Kočárek for useful comments on a previous version of the manuscript. This study was conducted with the approval of the Economic Planning Unit, Malaysia (Reference No. UPE: 40/200/19/2844). This study was partly supported by Keio Gijuku Academic Development Funds from Keio University (2021 and 2022) to YK, Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research (KAKENHI) from the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science Nos. 22770058, 15K07133, and 19K06746 to YK, and No. 21H02219 to JY.
Publisher Copyright:
© Yoshitaka Kamimura et al.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Euborellia (Anisolabididae: Anisolabidinae) is one of the most speciose genera of earwigs (Dermaptera), and its species-level classification is difficult. To settle the classification of brachypterous species with abbreviated tegmina recorded from East and Southeast Asia, we examined the morphology and reproductive isolation of three tentative Euborellia species, and analyzed the DNA barcoding region of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) gene. The observed complete reproductive isolation among the three Euborellia taxa and considerable differentiation in the COI sequences clearly show that each should be treated as a separate species. Based on morphology, distribution and the DNA sequence, we identify Euborellia sp. 1 of Malaysia as E. annulata (Fabricius), a circumtropical cosmopolitan with no records of a fully winged form. Samples from Ioto Island (= Iwo-jima Island: Ogasawara Islands, southern Japan) were also identified as this species. Euborellia sp. 3, from the main islands of Japan, was generally larger and lacked a Y-shaped pigmented area on the penis lobe, which is characteristic of Euborellia sp. 1. We propose reinstating E. pallipes (Shiraki) as the oldest name for this taxon. Euborellia sp. 2, even the brachypterous form, can be distinguished from these two species by its paler coloration (particularly the femora), ecarinate post-abdomen, and the shape of the male genitalia (parameres). We tentatively identify this species as E. philippinensis Srivastava based on the morphology of the brachypterous form, although the macropterous form cannot be distinguished from E. femoralis (Dohrn).
AB - Euborellia (Anisolabididae: Anisolabidinae) is one of the most speciose genera of earwigs (Dermaptera), and its species-level classification is difficult. To settle the classification of brachypterous species with abbreviated tegmina recorded from East and Southeast Asia, we examined the morphology and reproductive isolation of three tentative Euborellia species, and analyzed the DNA barcoding region of the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I (COI) gene. The observed complete reproductive isolation among the three Euborellia taxa and considerable differentiation in the COI sequences clearly show that each should be treated as a separate species. Based on morphology, distribution and the DNA sequence, we identify Euborellia sp. 1 of Malaysia as E. annulata (Fabricius), a circumtropical cosmopolitan with no records of a fully winged form. Samples from Ioto Island (= Iwo-jima Island: Ogasawara Islands, southern Japan) were also identified as this species. Euborellia sp. 3, from the main islands of Japan, was generally larger and lacked a Y-shaped pigmented area on the penis lobe, which is characteristic of Euborellia sp. 1. We propose reinstating E. pallipes (Shiraki) as the oldest name for this taxon. Euborellia sp. 2, even the brachypterous form, can be distinguished from these two species by its paler coloration (particularly the femora), ecarinate post-abdomen, and the shape of the male genitalia (parameres). We tentatively identify this species as E. philippinensis Srivastava based on the morphology of the brachypterous form, although the macropterous form cannot be distinguished from E. femoralis (Dohrn).
KW - DNA barcoding
KW - Euborellia pallipes
KW - genital morphology
KW - post-copulatory reproductive isolation
KW - reinstatement
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85147958474&partnerID=8YFLogxK
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85147958474&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3897/zookeys.1146.98248
DO - 10.3897/zookeys.1146.98248
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85147958474
SN - 1313-2989
VL - 1146
SP - 115
EP - 134
JO - ZooKeys
JF - ZooKeys
ER -