杏吧原创

Butterflies evolved 100 million years ago in North America

Many researchers thought butterflies first evolved in Asia, but a global genetic analysis suggests they arose in North America, well before the non-avian dinosaurs went extinct
A black swallowtail butterfly
Shutterstock / KathereneS

Butterflies first fluttered onto the scene in North America about 100 million years ago, according to a genetic analysis. The findings have been used to generate a detailed butterfly family tree, giving scientists new insights into butterflies鈥 evolutionary origins and how they spread across the world.

鈥淭he family relationships and the history of butterflies, surprisingly, is not very well known,鈥 says at the University of Florida.

Previous smaller-scale projects had attempted to pin down the insects鈥 most ancient ancestors, says Kawahara. There were also hypotheses about butterflies鈥 geographic origins, but no one had narrowed it down.

Kawahara and an international team of researchers gathered data on butterflies from all over the world, using specimens in 28 different museum collections. He and his colleagues analysed 391 genes from nearly 2300 butterfly species. The species came from 90 different countries and represented 92 per cent of all known butterfly genera.

at the Czech Academy of Sciences says he is impressed by the 鈥渦nprecedented amount of data handled鈥 in the study.

The researchers used genetic analysis to date when butterfly groups split apart from each other, and determined the most likely geographic origin of the first butterflies. The team estimates the earliest butterflies evolved about 100 million years ago.

This confirms earlier research that suggested the delicate nectar-sippers arose in a similar time period. Butterflies evolved from nocturnal moth ancestors following the proliferation of the first flowering plants during the Early Cretaceous period, exploiting the new food resource and taking advantage of the co-evolutionary relationship that was already forming between flowering plants and bees, says Kawahara.

Butterflies鈥 debut appears to have occurred in North America, amidst a backdrop of bony-plated herbivorous dinosaurs and fleet-footed, fluffy ancestors of Tyrannosaurus rex. This was a surprise to Kawahara.

鈥淪ome people had thought that because there鈥檚 a pretty high diversity of butterflies in Asia, that was the origin,鈥 he says.

From North America, the insects dispersed, first into South America and then westward to Australia, Asia and India, then an island subcontinent. Eventually butterflies flapped their way into Africa, and finally 鈥 about 17 million years ago 鈥 they arrived in Europe.

The research team also compiled more than 31,000 records of plants eaten by butterfly larvae, reconstructing the evolution of these plants alongside the butterflies. The team thinks that the first butterfly caterpillars munched on plants in the legume family. Today, more than two-thirds of butterfly species limit their diet to plants in the same family, while about one-third are generalists that feed on two or more different plant families.聽The newly gained knowledge about the evolutionary connections between butterflies and their host plants may be an important resource for butterfly conservation, says Kawahara.

鈥淭here are lots of butterflies that are disappearing very fast all over the world,鈥 he says. Having a solid understanding of how dependent they are on certain host plants could inform future conservation efforts.

The findings also reveal that the butterfly family tree may need extensive revision. The researchers estimate that 27 per cent of all butterfly tribes 鈥 collections of genera smaller than a family 鈥 are mistakenly grouped with others.

Butterflies are highly studied animals, says Kawahara, 鈥渂ut my gosh, we still have a lot of work to do鈥.

Journal reference:

Nature Ecology and Evolution

Topics: Evolution / Genetics / Insects