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Cladistic analysis of the Sepsidae (Cyclorrhapha: Diptera) based on a comparative scanning electron microscopic study of larvae
Author(s) -
MEIER RUDOLF
Publication year - 1995
Publication title -
systematic entomology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.552
H-Index - 66
eISSN - 1365-3113
pISSN - 0307-6970
DOI - 10.1111/j.1365-3113.1995.tb00086.x
Subject(s) - biology , paraphyly , polyphyly , monophyly , sister group , cladistics , zoology , phylogenetic tree , larva , genus , cladogram , clade , botany , genetics , gene
Abstract The result of a phylogenetic analysis of the Sepsidae based on larval characters is presented. It is shown that cyclorrhaphan larvae can be as rich a source of characters as Nematocera immatures when investigated using an SEM. The cladistic analysis comprised fifty‐two species in sixteen genera of the Sepsidae and five outgroup species and used fifty‐seven morphological characters. It found seven parsimonious trees which only differed with respect to the arrangement of some species within the genus Themira. The basal dichotomies of the phylogenetic trees are particularly well supported, indicating the conservative nature of larval characters. Orygma is confirmed as the sister group of all the remaining sepsids, the Sepsinae. There is good larval evidence that Ortalischema is the sister group of all remaining Sepsinae and that the Toxopodinae constitute an early radiation within the Sepsidae. According to larval data, some genera are paraphyletic ( Themira, Palaeosepsis ), but adult characters appear to contradict these findings. Among the traditionally recognized higher taxa within the Sepsidae, Hennig's Themira species‐group and Steysbal's Sepsini have to be rejected as polyphyletic. However, Hennig's Sepsis species‐group is confirmed as monophyletic and will probably constitute one major element of a future phylogenetic system of the Sepsidae. States of the strongly modified fore‐legs of some adult sepsid males are mapped onto the phylogenetic tree, largely confirming Šulc's ideas about the evolution of these features. The origin and evolution of male sternites with brushes and a gland on the tibiae of the males (‘osmeterium’) are discussed. Whereas adult characters point to a sister‐group relationship between the Sepsidae and the Ropalomeridae, larval characters appear to indicate a sister‐group relationship between the Coelopidae and the Sepsidae. The evidence for both hypotheses is critically evaluated.

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