Polyommatus damon

Bartoňová, Alena Sucháčková, Konvička, Martin, Marešová, Jana, Bláhová, Dana, Číp, David, Skala, Pavel, Andres, Miloš, Hula, Vladimír, Dolek, Matthias, Geyer, Adi, Böck, Oliver, Kadlec, Tomáš & Fric, Zdeněk Faltýnek, 2021, Extremely Endangered Butterflies of Scattered Central European Dry Grasslands Under Current Habitat Alteration, Insect Systematics and Diversity (AIFB) 5 (5), pp. 1-18 : 13

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1093/isd/ixab017

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03EE240C-FFC0-FF8C-FF2B-B00961FEE497

treatment provided by

Felipe

scientific name

Polyommatus damon
status

 

Polyommatus damon Biogeography

In this species, a mitochondrial group (BAPSda2) extends from the Alps through Central Europe and the SE Baltic coast to Central Asia and the Tuva region ( Fig. 3 View Fig ); it includes samples from eastern Anatolia. Southern Europe hosts separate clusters, one in the Western Alps and Apennines, and one linking the Iberian Peninsula with the western Balkans. As the Balkan samples are separated from the Iberian samples by ≥5 mutations each, a separate Balkan cluster might exist.

The gradual separation of several lineages in the ML analysis of COI haplotypes (Supp Material 2 [online only]) points to a possible origin of the current populations in the slopes of European high mountains, and colonization of lowlands during cooler periods, following the mid Quaternary expansion of steppes. An analogous situation was observed in the steppe butterfly Proterebia phegea (Borkhausen, 1788) ( Lepidoptera : Nymphalidae ), which originated in the Irano-Anatolian mountains ( Bartonova et al. 2018).

The result of the ML analysis for the concatenated dataset ( Fig. 3 View Fig ), however, correspond to the BAPS and genetic landscape analyses. These analyses showed that the recent P. damon genetic structure is driven by separation by Pleistocene mountain glaciers, similarly to cold-adapted species, whose distribution had been structured by upper Pleistocene glaciations ( Fig. 5 View Fig ) ( Schmitt et al. 2006, 2014, Minter et al. 2020). The mountains separated southern piedmont refugia from wider distributions on unglaciated northern lowland steppes. With Holocene deglaciation, P. damon recolonized higher elevations, so that populations from the Eastern Alps also originated from the BAPSda2 cluster. The distribution models ( Fig. 6 View Fig ) resemble cold-adapted species, for which the climatic niche is widest during LGM, and retreat to the mountains is apparent in interglacials (e.g., Marešová et al. 2021).

The BAPSda2 cluster contains several haplotypes with a wide distribution and many unique ones; in contrast to C. briseis , the network reveals a diverse and stable population structure with separation of marginal populations (Baltic and Anatolian), indicating continuous in situ existence, and connection between Central Europe and the Altai region. Two samples from České středohoří (CZ) were disclosed as a haplotype Da18 unique for the region, and one as Da16, which was present also in eastern Kazakhstan. The single successfully sequenced sample from Moravia (CZ), as well as the single sample from Lower Austria, belonged to Da20, present also in Eastern Alps, the Urals, and eastern Kazakhstan. The only sample from lowland Germany, on the other hand, belonged to Da19, together with a sample from north-western Spain.

Notably, one of the two confirmed P. damon larval host plants in Central Europe, Onobrychis viciifolia Scop. , is native to south-eastern Europe and has been cropped as fodder plant only since the early modern era ( Chrtková 1995). Another host plant in Central Europe, Onobrychis arenaria (Kit.) DC. , is a continental steppe element, likely present during glacial times (reported from Poland in the Younger Dryas Stadial, Mirek et al. 2002). Butterflies are capable of colonizing exotic host plants ( Singer and Parmesan 2018) or expanding to novel ranges with planting of their hosts ( Paradiso et al. 2019), and there exist mentions of P. damon developing on cropped O. viciifolia ( Schwarz 1949, Laštůvka and Laštůvka 2020). The genetic structure, however, indicates neither a recent south-north expansion, nor long-distance movements with hay. It favors P. damon ’s long-lasting presence in the region, likely utilizing O. arenaria in the past. Identical host plants are utilized by a related butterfly, Polyommatus ripartii (Freyer, 1830) ( Lepidoptera : Lycaenidae ), with a Ponto-Mediterranean and Central Asian range, and an isolated population present in southern Poland at least from the early Holocene ( Przybyłowicz et al. 2014).

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Arthropoda

Class

Insecta

Order

Lepidoptera

Family

Lycaenidae

Genus

Polyommatus

Darwin Core Archive (for parent article) View in SIBiLS Plain XML RDF