SlideShare uma empresa Scribd logo
1 de 1
Baixar para ler offline
18-0 18-1
16—Rostrum, dorsal surface
(0) plane or medially sulcate, not carinate
(1) medially carinate
17—Rostrum, dorso-lateral angle
(0) smoothly curved, any angulation weak
(1) conspicuously angulate
18—Rostrum, medio-longitudinal sulcus
(0) absent
(1) present
21—Rostrum, dorsolateral fovea
(0) absent
(1) present
28—Rostrum, occipital suture
(0) short, not reaching eye
(1) reaching middle of eye ventrally
16-0 16-1
17-117-0
21-0 21-1
45—Pronotum, surface
(0) smooth or finely rugose
(1) irregularly excavate
29—Rostrum, ventral surface
(0) medially flat, not impressed
(1) medially with triangular impression
79—Elytral vestiture, curled serrate setae
(0) absent
(1) present
79-1
80—Elytral vestiture, series of stripes
(0) absent
(1) present
80-1
60—Metatibial apex, vestiture
(0) ventrally lacking linear, suberect setae
(1) ventrally with sparse, suberect setae
116—Aedeagus, endophallus, sclerites
(0) separate or contiguous, lacking bridge
(1) connected through arched bridge
116-1
119—Aedeagus, endophallus, posterior sclerite
(0) width constant, basally not enlarged
(1) basally enlarged, arched 119-1
48—Pronotum, postocular vibrissae
(0) absent
(1) present
48-1
67—Elytra, apex
(0) not projected, may be acute
(1) distinctly projected
60-1
110—Aedeagus, endophallus, tubular sclerite
(0) absent
(1) present
111—Aedeagus, endophallus, tubular sclerite
(0) not divided into two regions
(1) divided into anterior/posterior region
111-1
24—Rostrum, hypostomal-labial suture
(0) reduced, short, or foveate
(1) long, linear, reaching prementum
29-129-0
24-0 24-1
Figure 5. Core morphological characters (orange color in Fig. 2).
45-145-0
41—Pronotum, disc
(0) convex
(1) flattened
41-141-0
110-1
28-128-0
144—Vestiture, circular glossy metallic scales
(0) absent; if metallic, not circular or glossy
(1) present; often arranged as fasciae or stripes
144-1144-1
67-0 67-1
The New World tribe Eustylini Lacordaire, 1863, pertains to the broad-nosed weevils
(Entiminae) and currently comprises 23 genera. Members of Eustylini include
agriculturally important species, e.g., Diaprepes abbreviatus (Linnaeus, 1758), an
introduced citrus pest in the continental U.S. Franz (2012) published the first phylogeny
of Eustylini based on morphological characters. Eustylini were recovered as polyphyletic
and re-circumscribed to include several genera previously placed in other tribes. As a
result, all but two of the sampled eustyline genera formed a monophyletic clade. The
Exophthalmus genus complex is positioned within that clade and contains eight
sampled genera, the largest (with 95 species) being Exophthalmus Schoenherr, 1823.
The 2012 analysis uncovered systematic problems that motivate the current study.
Exophthalmus remains polyphyletic, with its species separated into at least three
clades. Thus Exophthalmus needs to be redelimited and its current members reassigned
to phylogenetically appropriate generic membership. The clade of continentals species
also contains Rhinospathe Chevrolat, 1878, and Chauliopleurus Champion, 1911,
warranting generic synonymy. Tropirhinus Schoenherr, 1823, Tetrabothynus Labram &
Imhoff, 1852, Compsoricus Franz, 2012, and part of Exophthalmus exhibit ambiguous
boundaries. These groups need to be either re-circumscribed or synonymized.
Systematics of the Exophthalmus genus complex – current status
1
2
3
4
5
1. Test and delimit generic boundaries within the Exophthalmus genus complex based on both
morphological and molecular phylogenetic inferences.
2. Revise generic classification within the Exophthalmus genus complex.
3. Redefine the limit of Exophthalmus and reclassify its current constituent species.
Research objectives
Morphological phylogeny. Character matrix (144 characters, examples in Figs 4 & 5) was extracted
and modified from Franz (2012). Thirty-eight species of eight genera in the Exophthalmus genus
complex were sampled, along with 52 species of other eustylines or from other tribes. Phylogenetic
trees were inferred with NONA and character optimizations with WinClada under parsimony.
Molecular phylogeny. Seventy ingroup terminals were included, representing > 65 species and
seven genera. The outgroup contained 105 terminals. Six gene fragments (COI, COII, Ef1-α, Arginine
kinase, 12S, 28S) were sequenced, aligned, and concatenated to generate a 4787 bp data set.
Phylogenetic reconstructions were performed using parsimony in TNT.
Materials & methods
(1) Pachnaeus Schoenherr, 1826
Synapomorphies: Hypostomal-labial suture
long, reaching prementum (24-1, Figs. 2 &
5); postocular vibrissae present (48-1);
anterior endophallic sclerite membranous,
posteriorly tubular (113-1).
Distribution: Cuba & Jamaica.
(2) Tropirhinus Schoenherr, 1823
Taxonomic amendments: Tetrabothynus
Labram & Imhoff, 1852, and Compsoricus
Franz, 2012, placed as junior synonyms.
Exophthalmus species in clade 2 transferred
to Tropirhinus.
Synapomorphies: Pronotal disc flattened or
impressed (41-1); elytral apex projected (67-
1); circular metallic scales forming fasciae
(144-1).
Distribution: Cuba, Hispaniola & Puerto Rico.
(3) Rhinospathe Chevrolat, 1878
Taxonomic amendments: Chauliopleurus
Champion, 1911, placed as junior synonym.
Continental Exophthalmus spp. transferred to
Rhinospathe.
Diagnosis: Rostrum with dorsolateral fovea
(21-1); rostrum ventrally with a short, deep,
triangular impression (29-1).
Distribution: Southern Mexico, Central
America & northern South America.
(4) Diaprepes Schoenherr, 1823
Synapomorphies: Rostrum dorsolaterally
carinate (17-1); occipital suture extends to
middle part of eye (28-1); pronotum
irregularly excavate (45-1).
Distribution: Lesser Antilles & Puerto Rico.
(5) Exophthalmus Schoenherr, 1823
Taxonomic amendments: Exophthalmus re-
circumscribed to refer to a clade containing
its type species E. quadrivittatus (Olivier,
1807). More than 50 species transferred to
other genera.
Synapomorphies: Rostrum dorsally plane,
lacking carina or groove (15-1, 16-0);
Pronotum and elytra with curled, serrate
scales (79-1), arranged into stripes or patches
(80-1).
Distribution: Cuba, Jamaica & Hispaniola.
Figure 1 (left). Proposed new generic classification within the Exophthalmus genus complex, and habitus images of
select species. Five genera are recognized (Figs. 2 & 3). Three are placed in synonymy. Exophthalmus is redefined.
Habitus image (current, unchanged names): (1-3) Pachnaeus spp., Cuba (4) Pachnaeus marmoratus (5) Pachnaeus sp., Jamaica (6) Compsoricus maricao (7)
Exophthalmus humeridens (8) E. regalis (9) E. roseipes (10) E. quindecimpunctatus (11) Tetrabothynus spectabilis (12) Tropirhinus elegans (13) Tropirhinus
nr. lepidus (14) Tropirhinus Cuba GZ48 (15) T. lepidus (16) E. agrestis (17) E. impositus (18) E. jekelianus (19) E. lunaris (20) Exophthalmus Mexico (21)
Exophthalmus nr. annulonotatus (22) E. opulentus (23) Exophthalmus PA[Panama].GZ65 (24) Exophthalmus CR[Costa Rica].GZ147 (25) Exophthalmus
CR.GZ163 (26) E. triangulifer (27) E. verecundus (28) Exophthalmus nr. vermiculatus (29) E. sulcicrus (30) Rhinospathe v-album (31) Diaprepes abbreviatus
(32) D. boxi (33) D. doublierii (34) D. maugei (35) D. rohrii (36) E. cinerascens (37) E. hieroglyphicus (38) E. pictus (39) E. similis (40) E. scalaris (41) E.
quadrivittatus (42) Exophthalmus DR[Dominican Republic] sp. nov. (43) Exophthalmus DR6 (44) Exophthalmus nr. sulphuratus (45) E. vittatus.
Both morphological and molecular phylogenies recover the monophyly of the Exophthalmus genus
complex and the polyphyly of Exophthalmus. They are broadly congruent in five clades, although
the relationships among the clades differ between the two analyses. Five genera can be delimited
within these clades (Fig. 1). Two (Clades 1 & 4 in Figs. 2 & 3) correspond to Pachnaeus and
Diaprepes. Clade 2 contains Tetrabothynus, Tropirhinus, Compsoricus, and Exophthalmus spp.
Tropirhinus is considered the valid name for this clade, hence the other two genera are
synonymized. A large continental clade (3) is obtained, now referred to as Rhinospathe. The genus
Exophthalmus is narrowed to include only West Indian species with a "stripy look" (Figs. 1 & 5).
Future work will focus on increasing species sampling, expanding the character range, combining
morphological and molecular data in phylogeny reconstructions, and describing new species.
Results, taxonomic proposals & conclusions
Figure 2 (above). Morphological phylogeny of the Exophthalmus
genus complex, with character optimizations.
Figure 3 (above). Molecular phylogeny
reconstructed using parsimony.
1
2
4
5
3
57
9893
78
Franz N.M. 2012. Phylogenetic reassessment of the Exophthalmus genus complex
(Curculionidae: Entiminae: Eustylini, Geonemini). Zoological Journal of the
Linnean Society 164: 510–557.
This work is supported by the National Science Foundation (DEB-1155984) and the
United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) (Agreement No. 58-1275-1-335).
Dr. Charles W. O'Brien assisted with species identifications. Lin Pan, Will Sides,
Julian Jones, and Joseph Hunter captured habitus or head images.
Reference & acknowledgements
Figure 4 (left).
Morphological diversity of
the rostrum (dorsal view).
Orange numbers denote "core
characters" (see Fig. 5).
Numbers
shown above
branches are
jackknifing
resampling
values.
85
91

Mais conteúdo relacionado

Destaque (11)

Assembling the Tree of Life from public DNA sequence data
Assembling the Tree of Life from public DNA sequence dataAssembling the Tree of Life from public DNA sequence data
Assembling the Tree of Life from public DNA sequence data
 
Zhang Franz ESCJAM 2015 Exophthalmus Reclassification
Zhang Franz ESCJAM 2015 Exophthalmus ReclassificationZhang Franz ESCJAM 2015 Exophthalmus Reclassification
Zhang Franz ESCJAM 2015 Exophthalmus Reclassification
 
Invisible world of Marine Plants
Invisible world of Marine PlantsInvisible world of Marine Plants
Invisible world of Marine Plants
 
JORNADA BENEFICIOS FISCALES
JORNADA BENEFICIOS FISCALESJORNADA BENEFICIOS FISCALES
JORNADA BENEFICIOS FISCALES
 
Bádminton
BádmintonBádminton
Bádminton
 
Letter to Andrew Dilnot, UK Statistics Authority
Letter to Andrew Dilnot, UK Statistics AuthorityLetter to Andrew Dilnot, UK Statistics Authority
Letter to Andrew Dilnot, UK Statistics Authority
 
Ramasdelderecho isabel medina
Ramasdelderecho isabel medinaRamasdelderecho isabel medina
Ramasdelderecho isabel medina
 
Xat
XatXat
Xat
 
Ac repairs in aventura
Ac repairs in aventuraAc repairs in aventura
Ac repairs in aventura
 
Rommel ramírez
Rommel ramírezRommel ramírez
Rommel ramírez
 
Beste Haustürenplaner in Deutschland
Beste Haustürenplaner in DeutschlandBeste Haustürenplaner in Deutschland
Beste Haustürenplaner in Deutschland
 

Semelhante a Zhang franz esc_esa_2015_exophthalmus_1.0_franz_zhang_edit

2012 -- Alderslade_McFadden -- Jasonisis
2012 -- Alderslade_McFadden -- Jasonisis2012 -- Alderslade_McFadden -- Jasonisis
2012 -- Alderslade_McFadden -- Jasonisis
Phil Alderslade
 
Gutell 094.int.j.plant.sci.2005.166.815
Gutell 094.int.j.plant.sci.2005.166.815Gutell 094.int.j.plant.sci.2005.166.815
Gutell 094.int.j.plant.sci.2005.166.815
Robin Gutell
 
Osteology of the shoulder girdle in the piciformes, passeriformes and related...
Osteology of the shoulder girdle in the piciformes, passeriformes and related...Osteology of the shoulder girdle in the piciformes, passeriformes and related...
Osteology of the shoulder girdle in the piciformes, passeriformes and related...
herculanoalvarenga
 

Semelhante a Zhang franz esc_esa_2015_exophthalmus_1.0_franz_zhang_edit (20)

Adesh Kumar* and Rakesh Kumar**
Adesh Kumar* and Rakesh Kumar**Adesh Kumar* and Rakesh Kumar**
Adesh Kumar* and Rakesh Kumar**
 
Zt01037p064
Zt01037p064Zt01037p064
Zt01037p064
 
Poster_Salomon&Sklenar
Poster_Salomon&SklenarPoster_Salomon&Sklenar
Poster_Salomon&Sklenar
 
Taxonomic study of the family Scoliidae (Hymenoptera; Aculeata) in Iraq - JBES
Taxonomic study of the family Scoliidae (Hymenoptera; Aculeata) in Iraq - JBESTaxonomic study of the family Scoliidae (Hymenoptera; Aculeata) in Iraq - JBES
Taxonomic study of the family Scoliidae (Hymenoptera; Aculeata) in Iraq - JBES
 
2012 -- Alderslade_McFadden -- Jasonisis
2012 -- Alderslade_McFadden -- Jasonisis2012 -- Alderslade_McFadden -- Jasonisis
2012 -- Alderslade_McFadden -- Jasonisis
 
A Discussion of the Trematode Genus Pleorchis Railliet, 1896 (Digenea: Pleorc...
A Discussion of the Trematode Genus Pleorchis Railliet, 1896 (Digenea: Pleorc...A Discussion of the Trematode Genus Pleorchis Railliet, 1896 (Digenea: Pleorc...
A Discussion of the Trematode Genus Pleorchis Railliet, 1896 (Digenea: Pleorc...
 
2000 JME (51)278-285
2000 JME (51)278-2852000 JME (51)278-285
2000 JME (51)278-285
 
Arthropod Phylogeny
Arthropod PhylogenyArthropod Phylogeny
Arthropod Phylogeny
 
Phylum Ctenophora Classification.pdf
Phylum Ctenophora Classification.pdfPhylum Ctenophora Classification.pdf
Phylum Ctenophora Classification.pdf
 
Gutell 094.int.j.plant.sci.2005.166.815
Gutell 094.int.j.plant.sci.2005.166.815Gutell 094.int.j.plant.sci.2005.166.815
Gutell 094.int.j.plant.sci.2005.166.815
 
Osteology of the shoulder girdle in the piciformes, passeriformes and related...
Osteology of the shoulder girdle in the piciformes, passeriformes and related...Osteology of the shoulder girdle in the piciformes, passeriformes and related...
Osteology of the shoulder girdle in the piciformes, passeriformes and related...
 
Roell & campos poster
Roell & campos posterRoell & campos poster
Roell & campos poster
 
35bc514
35bc51435bc514
35bc514
 
photo of moss by Angie Jane Gray (1).pdf
photo of moss by Angie Jane Gray (1).pdfphoto of moss by Angie Jane Gray (1).pdf
photo of moss by Angie Jane Gray (1).pdf
 
4 phylogeny-ch26
4 phylogeny-ch264 phylogeny-ch26
4 phylogeny-ch26
 
Angiosperm phlogeny group taxonomy classification
Angiosperm phlogeny group taxonomy classificationAngiosperm phlogeny group taxonomy classification
Angiosperm phlogeny group taxonomy classification
 
Angiosperm phlogeny group taxonomy classification
Angiosperm phlogeny group taxonomy classificationAngiosperm phlogeny group taxonomy classification
Angiosperm phlogeny group taxonomy classification
 
D0612025
D0612025D0612025
D0612025
 
Prevalence and morphological details of Nyctotherus periplanetae in the host ...
Prevalence and morphological details of Nyctotherus periplanetae in the host ...Prevalence and morphological details of Nyctotherus periplanetae in the host ...
Prevalence and morphological details of Nyctotherus periplanetae in the host ...
 
D0612025
D0612025D0612025
D0612025
 

Último

Asymmetry in the atmosphere of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-76 b
Asymmetry in the atmosphere of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-76 bAsymmetry in the atmosphere of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-76 b
Asymmetry in the atmosphere of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-76 b
Sérgio Sacani
 
Biogenic Sulfur Gases as Biosignatures on Temperate Sub-Neptune Waterworlds
Biogenic Sulfur Gases as Biosignatures on Temperate Sub-Neptune WaterworldsBiogenic Sulfur Gases as Biosignatures on Temperate Sub-Neptune Waterworlds
Biogenic Sulfur Gases as Biosignatures on Temperate Sub-Neptune Waterworlds
Sérgio Sacani
 
Pests of cotton_Sucking_Pests_Dr.UPR.pdf
Pests of cotton_Sucking_Pests_Dr.UPR.pdfPests of cotton_Sucking_Pests_Dr.UPR.pdf
Pests of cotton_Sucking_Pests_Dr.UPR.pdf
PirithiRaju
 
Seismic Method Estimate velocity from seismic data.pptx
Seismic Method Estimate velocity from seismic  data.pptxSeismic Method Estimate velocity from seismic  data.pptx
Seismic Method Estimate velocity from seismic data.pptx
AlMamun560346
 
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroids
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroidsHubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroids
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroids
Sérgio Sacani
 
Chemical Tests; flame test, positive and negative ions test Edexcel Internati...
Chemical Tests; flame test, positive and negative ions test Edexcel Internati...Chemical Tests; flame test, positive and negative ions test Edexcel Internati...
Chemical Tests; flame test, positive and negative ions test Edexcel Internati...
ssuser79fe74
 
Presentation Vikram Lander by Vedansh Gupta.pptx
Presentation Vikram Lander by Vedansh Gupta.pptxPresentation Vikram Lander by Vedansh Gupta.pptx
Presentation Vikram Lander by Vedansh Gupta.pptx
gindu3009
 
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOST
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOSTDisentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOST
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOST
Sérgio Sacani
 

Último (20)

Forensic Biology & Its biological significance.pdf
Forensic Biology & Its biological significance.pdfForensic Biology & Its biological significance.pdf
Forensic Biology & Its biological significance.pdf
 
Creating and Analyzing Definitive Screening Designs
Creating and Analyzing Definitive Screening DesignsCreating and Analyzing Definitive Screening Designs
Creating and Analyzing Definitive Screening Designs
 
Zoology 4th semester series (krishna).pdf
Zoology 4th semester series (krishna).pdfZoology 4th semester series (krishna).pdf
Zoology 4th semester series (krishna).pdf
 
Chemistry 4th semester series (krishna).pdf
Chemistry 4th semester series (krishna).pdfChemistry 4th semester series (krishna).pdf
Chemistry 4th semester series (krishna).pdf
 
GBSN - Microbiology (Unit 1)
GBSN - Microbiology (Unit 1)GBSN - Microbiology (Unit 1)
GBSN - Microbiology (Unit 1)
 
Asymmetry in the atmosphere of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-76 b
Asymmetry in the atmosphere of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-76 bAsymmetry in the atmosphere of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-76 b
Asymmetry in the atmosphere of the ultra-hot Jupiter WASP-76 b
 
SAMASTIPUR CALL GIRL 7857803690 LOW PRICE ESCORT SERVICE
SAMASTIPUR CALL GIRL 7857803690  LOW PRICE  ESCORT SERVICESAMASTIPUR CALL GIRL 7857803690  LOW PRICE  ESCORT SERVICE
SAMASTIPUR CALL GIRL 7857803690 LOW PRICE ESCORT SERVICE
 
Biogenic Sulfur Gases as Biosignatures on Temperate Sub-Neptune Waterworlds
Biogenic Sulfur Gases as Biosignatures on Temperate Sub-Neptune WaterworldsBiogenic Sulfur Gases as Biosignatures on Temperate Sub-Neptune Waterworlds
Biogenic Sulfur Gases as Biosignatures on Temperate Sub-Neptune Waterworlds
 
GBSN - Biochemistry (Unit 1)
GBSN - Biochemistry (Unit 1)GBSN - Biochemistry (Unit 1)
GBSN - Biochemistry (Unit 1)
 
Pests of cotton_Sucking_Pests_Dr.UPR.pdf
Pests of cotton_Sucking_Pests_Dr.UPR.pdfPests of cotton_Sucking_Pests_Dr.UPR.pdf
Pests of cotton_Sucking_Pests_Dr.UPR.pdf
 
Biological Classification BioHack (3).pdf
Biological Classification BioHack (3).pdfBiological Classification BioHack (3).pdf
Biological Classification BioHack (3).pdf
 
Seismic Method Estimate velocity from seismic data.pptx
Seismic Method Estimate velocity from seismic  data.pptxSeismic Method Estimate velocity from seismic  data.pptx
Seismic Method Estimate velocity from seismic data.pptx
 
Stunning ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Panchshil Enclave Delhi NCR
Stunning ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Panchshil Enclave Delhi NCRStunning ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Panchshil Enclave Delhi NCR
Stunning ➥8448380779▻ Call Girls In Panchshil Enclave Delhi NCR
 
CELL -Structural and Functional unit of life.pdf
CELL -Structural and Functional unit of life.pdfCELL -Structural and Functional unit of life.pdf
CELL -Structural and Functional unit of life.pdf
 
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroids
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroidsHubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroids
Hubble Asteroid Hunter III. Physical properties of newly found asteroids
 
Chemical Tests; flame test, positive and negative ions test Edexcel Internati...
Chemical Tests; flame test, positive and negative ions test Edexcel Internati...Chemical Tests; flame test, positive and negative ions test Edexcel Internati...
Chemical Tests; flame test, positive and negative ions test Edexcel Internati...
 
Presentation Vikram Lander by Vedansh Gupta.pptx
Presentation Vikram Lander by Vedansh Gupta.pptxPresentation Vikram Lander by Vedansh Gupta.pptx
Presentation Vikram Lander by Vedansh Gupta.pptx
 
Botany 4th semester series (krishna).pdf
Botany 4th semester series (krishna).pdfBotany 4th semester series (krishna).pdf
Botany 4th semester series (krishna).pdf
 
Green chemistry and Sustainable development.pptx
Green chemistry  and Sustainable development.pptxGreen chemistry  and Sustainable development.pptx
Green chemistry and Sustainable development.pptx
 
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOST
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOSTDisentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOST
Disentangling the origin of chemical differences using GHOST
 

Zhang franz esc_esa_2015_exophthalmus_1.0_franz_zhang_edit

  • 1. 18-0 18-1 16—Rostrum, dorsal surface (0) plane or medially sulcate, not carinate (1) medially carinate 17—Rostrum, dorso-lateral angle (0) smoothly curved, any angulation weak (1) conspicuously angulate 18—Rostrum, medio-longitudinal sulcus (0) absent (1) present 21—Rostrum, dorsolateral fovea (0) absent (1) present 28—Rostrum, occipital suture (0) short, not reaching eye (1) reaching middle of eye ventrally 16-0 16-1 17-117-0 21-0 21-1 45—Pronotum, surface (0) smooth or finely rugose (1) irregularly excavate 29—Rostrum, ventral surface (0) medially flat, not impressed (1) medially with triangular impression 79—Elytral vestiture, curled serrate setae (0) absent (1) present 79-1 80—Elytral vestiture, series of stripes (0) absent (1) present 80-1 60—Metatibial apex, vestiture (0) ventrally lacking linear, suberect setae (1) ventrally with sparse, suberect setae 116—Aedeagus, endophallus, sclerites (0) separate or contiguous, lacking bridge (1) connected through arched bridge 116-1 119—Aedeagus, endophallus, posterior sclerite (0) width constant, basally not enlarged (1) basally enlarged, arched 119-1 48—Pronotum, postocular vibrissae (0) absent (1) present 48-1 67—Elytra, apex (0) not projected, may be acute (1) distinctly projected 60-1 110—Aedeagus, endophallus, tubular sclerite (0) absent (1) present 111—Aedeagus, endophallus, tubular sclerite (0) not divided into two regions (1) divided into anterior/posterior region 111-1 24—Rostrum, hypostomal-labial suture (0) reduced, short, or foveate (1) long, linear, reaching prementum 29-129-0 24-0 24-1 Figure 5. Core morphological characters (orange color in Fig. 2). 45-145-0 41—Pronotum, disc (0) convex (1) flattened 41-141-0 110-1 28-128-0 144—Vestiture, circular glossy metallic scales (0) absent; if metallic, not circular or glossy (1) present; often arranged as fasciae or stripes 144-1144-1 67-0 67-1 The New World tribe Eustylini Lacordaire, 1863, pertains to the broad-nosed weevils (Entiminae) and currently comprises 23 genera. Members of Eustylini include agriculturally important species, e.g., Diaprepes abbreviatus (Linnaeus, 1758), an introduced citrus pest in the continental U.S. Franz (2012) published the first phylogeny of Eustylini based on morphological characters. Eustylini were recovered as polyphyletic and re-circumscribed to include several genera previously placed in other tribes. As a result, all but two of the sampled eustyline genera formed a monophyletic clade. The Exophthalmus genus complex is positioned within that clade and contains eight sampled genera, the largest (with 95 species) being Exophthalmus Schoenherr, 1823. The 2012 analysis uncovered systematic problems that motivate the current study. Exophthalmus remains polyphyletic, with its species separated into at least three clades. Thus Exophthalmus needs to be redelimited and its current members reassigned to phylogenetically appropriate generic membership. The clade of continentals species also contains Rhinospathe Chevrolat, 1878, and Chauliopleurus Champion, 1911, warranting generic synonymy. Tropirhinus Schoenherr, 1823, Tetrabothynus Labram & Imhoff, 1852, Compsoricus Franz, 2012, and part of Exophthalmus exhibit ambiguous boundaries. These groups need to be either re-circumscribed or synonymized. Systematics of the Exophthalmus genus complex – current status 1 2 3 4 5 1. Test and delimit generic boundaries within the Exophthalmus genus complex based on both morphological and molecular phylogenetic inferences. 2. Revise generic classification within the Exophthalmus genus complex. 3. Redefine the limit of Exophthalmus and reclassify its current constituent species. Research objectives Morphological phylogeny. Character matrix (144 characters, examples in Figs 4 & 5) was extracted and modified from Franz (2012). Thirty-eight species of eight genera in the Exophthalmus genus complex were sampled, along with 52 species of other eustylines or from other tribes. Phylogenetic trees were inferred with NONA and character optimizations with WinClada under parsimony. Molecular phylogeny. Seventy ingroup terminals were included, representing > 65 species and seven genera. The outgroup contained 105 terminals. Six gene fragments (COI, COII, Ef1-α, Arginine kinase, 12S, 28S) were sequenced, aligned, and concatenated to generate a 4787 bp data set. Phylogenetic reconstructions were performed using parsimony in TNT. Materials & methods (1) Pachnaeus Schoenherr, 1826 Synapomorphies: Hypostomal-labial suture long, reaching prementum (24-1, Figs. 2 & 5); postocular vibrissae present (48-1); anterior endophallic sclerite membranous, posteriorly tubular (113-1). Distribution: Cuba & Jamaica. (2) Tropirhinus Schoenherr, 1823 Taxonomic amendments: Tetrabothynus Labram & Imhoff, 1852, and Compsoricus Franz, 2012, placed as junior synonyms. Exophthalmus species in clade 2 transferred to Tropirhinus. Synapomorphies: Pronotal disc flattened or impressed (41-1); elytral apex projected (67- 1); circular metallic scales forming fasciae (144-1). Distribution: Cuba, Hispaniola & Puerto Rico. (3) Rhinospathe Chevrolat, 1878 Taxonomic amendments: Chauliopleurus Champion, 1911, placed as junior synonym. Continental Exophthalmus spp. transferred to Rhinospathe. Diagnosis: Rostrum with dorsolateral fovea (21-1); rostrum ventrally with a short, deep, triangular impression (29-1). Distribution: Southern Mexico, Central America & northern South America. (4) Diaprepes Schoenherr, 1823 Synapomorphies: Rostrum dorsolaterally carinate (17-1); occipital suture extends to middle part of eye (28-1); pronotum irregularly excavate (45-1). Distribution: Lesser Antilles & Puerto Rico. (5) Exophthalmus Schoenherr, 1823 Taxonomic amendments: Exophthalmus re- circumscribed to refer to a clade containing its type species E. quadrivittatus (Olivier, 1807). More than 50 species transferred to other genera. Synapomorphies: Rostrum dorsally plane, lacking carina or groove (15-1, 16-0); Pronotum and elytra with curled, serrate scales (79-1), arranged into stripes or patches (80-1). Distribution: Cuba, Jamaica & Hispaniola. Figure 1 (left). Proposed new generic classification within the Exophthalmus genus complex, and habitus images of select species. Five genera are recognized (Figs. 2 & 3). Three are placed in synonymy. Exophthalmus is redefined. Habitus image (current, unchanged names): (1-3) Pachnaeus spp., Cuba (4) Pachnaeus marmoratus (5) Pachnaeus sp., Jamaica (6) Compsoricus maricao (7) Exophthalmus humeridens (8) E. regalis (9) E. roseipes (10) E. quindecimpunctatus (11) Tetrabothynus spectabilis (12) Tropirhinus elegans (13) Tropirhinus nr. lepidus (14) Tropirhinus Cuba GZ48 (15) T. lepidus (16) E. agrestis (17) E. impositus (18) E. jekelianus (19) E. lunaris (20) Exophthalmus Mexico (21) Exophthalmus nr. annulonotatus (22) E. opulentus (23) Exophthalmus PA[Panama].GZ65 (24) Exophthalmus CR[Costa Rica].GZ147 (25) Exophthalmus CR.GZ163 (26) E. triangulifer (27) E. verecundus (28) Exophthalmus nr. vermiculatus (29) E. sulcicrus (30) Rhinospathe v-album (31) Diaprepes abbreviatus (32) D. boxi (33) D. doublierii (34) D. maugei (35) D. rohrii (36) E. cinerascens (37) E. hieroglyphicus (38) E. pictus (39) E. similis (40) E. scalaris (41) E. quadrivittatus (42) Exophthalmus DR[Dominican Republic] sp. nov. (43) Exophthalmus DR6 (44) Exophthalmus nr. sulphuratus (45) E. vittatus. Both morphological and molecular phylogenies recover the monophyly of the Exophthalmus genus complex and the polyphyly of Exophthalmus. They are broadly congruent in five clades, although the relationships among the clades differ between the two analyses. Five genera can be delimited within these clades (Fig. 1). Two (Clades 1 & 4 in Figs. 2 & 3) correspond to Pachnaeus and Diaprepes. Clade 2 contains Tetrabothynus, Tropirhinus, Compsoricus, and Exophthalmus spp. Tropirhinus is considered the valid name for this clade, hence the other two genera are synonymized. A large continental clade (3) is obtained, now referred to as Rhinospathe. The genus Exophthalmus is narrowed to include only West Indian species with a "stripy look" (Figs. 1 & 5). Future work will focus on increasing species sampling, expanding the character range, combining morphological and molecular data in phylogeny reconstructions, and describing new species. Results, taxonomic proposals & conclusions Figure 2 (above). Morphological phylogeny of the Exophthalmus genus complex, with character optimizations. Figure 3 (above). Molecular phylogeny reconstructed using parsimony. 1 2 4 5 3 57 9893 78 Franz N.M. 2012. Phylogenetic reassessment of the Exophthalmus genus complex (Curculionidae: Entiminae: Eustylini, Geonemini). Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society 164: 510–557. This work is supported by the National Science Foundation (DEB-1155984) and the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA) (Agreement No. 58-1275-1-335). Dr. Charles W. O'Brien assisted with species identifications. Lin Pan, Will Sides, Julian Jones, and Joseph Hunter captured habitus or head images. Reference & acknowledgements Figure 4 (left). Morphological diversity of the rostrum (dorsal view). Orange numbers denote "core characters" (see Fig. 5). Numbers shown above branches are jackknifing resampling values. 85 91