A phylogenetic reappraisal of the birdwing genusOrnithoptera(Lepidoptera: Papilionidae: Troidini) and a new theory of its evolution in relation to Gondwanan vicariance biogeography
- 1 November 1996
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Journal of Natural History
- Vol. 30 (11) , 1707-1736
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00222939600771001
Abstract
The troidine papilionid genus Ornithoptera is shown to be distinct from Troides In order to reappraise the interrelationships of the member species of Ornithoptera, and to test the resultant theory of their evolution against biogeographical data, the genus is revised using Hennigian cladistic methodology through computer analysis. The input data for this was drawn equally from immature stages and adult characters. A single cladogram hypothesising the likely phylogeny of the Ornithoptera species was generated. With minor weighting of a single important adult character, a further two cladograms were generated, one of which is similar to hypotheses proposed by previous workers. Based on these findings, and on ecological data, notably larval foodplant relations with Aristolochiaceae, as well as present-day biogeographical data, a new theory of the origin and evolution of Ornithoptera is presented which fits well Gondwanan vicariance events ascertained by geological studies: essentially that Ornithoptera evolved on northward drifting Australia, allopatrically from Troides on the Indian plate, and therefore that Ornithoptera did not reach the Australian Subregion via Troides-like ancestors in Southeast Asia as has been previously postulated. As ‘living fossils’ representative of an ancient, Gondwanaland-derived, austral faunal element, the Ornithoptera should be regarded even more highly in terms of their ‘conservation value’.Keywords
This publication has 26 references indexed in Scilit:
- Taxonomy and preliminary phylogeny of the parasitic genusApocephalus, subgenusMesophora(Diptera: Phoridae)Systematic Entomology, 1993
- Transcending the Wallace line: do the western edges of the Australina region and the Australian plate coincide?Australian Systematic Botany, 1991
- A review of the current fossil evidence of Lepidoptera in the MesozoicBiological Journal of the Linnean Society, 1986
- The systematic position of Antirrhea and Caerois, with comments on the classification of the Nymphalidae (Lepidoptera)Systematic Entomology, 1985
- A NEW AUSTRALIAN STAG BEETLE (COLEOPTERA: LUCANIDAE) WITH NEOTROPICAL AFFINITIESAustralian Journal of Entomology, 1978
- AN EXAMPLE OF NATURAL HYBRIDIZATION BETWEEN TROIDES OBLONGOMACULATUS PAPUENSIS WALLACE AND ORNITHOPTERA PRIAMUS POSEIDON DOUBLEDAY (LEPIDOPTERA: PAPILIONIDAE)Australian Journal of Entomology, 1977
- The affinities within four butterfly groups (Lepidoptera: Rhopalocera) in relation to general patterns of butterfly distribution in the Indo‐Australian areaEcological Entomology, 1973
- South-East Asia as a Part of GondwanalandNature, 1971
- A NOTE ON THE STATUS OF ORNITHOPTERA ALLOTTEI (ROTHSCHILD) (LEPIDOPTERA: PAPILIONIDAE)Australian Journal of Entomology, 1970
- Palæontology without Fossils in the 'Bird-Wing' ButterfliesNature, 1944