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Science

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BumRushDaShow

(144,844 posts)
Tue May 16, 2023, 08:41 AM May 2023

Butterflies originated in North America after splitting from moths, new study suggests [View all]

I don't normally post in this group despite being a retired scientist... But saw this article this morning and thought it was pretty cool! If confirmed, that would be a fascinating revelation of these insects being indigenous to the western hemisphere.

Butterflies originated in North America after splitting from moths, new study suggests


May 16, 2023 5:00 AM ET

Ari Daniel



Akito Kawahara remembers being eight years old when he went on a special tour of the insect collection at the American Museum of Natural History in New York City. He marveled at the vast array of pinned bugs before stopping in front of a large picture of the butterfly family tree. A number of spots on that tree, he saw, were curiously blank. "Just looking at it, realizing that scientists at these museums still don't know these basic things — I'll never forget that day," Kawahara says.

That moment sparked a lifelong passion in Kawahara to fill in those blanks and determine where these charismatic insects originated. Now, he's gotten a little closer to an answer. His latest research shows that butterflies probably first flapped their wings in present-day western North America or Central America.

"We were surprised," says Kawahara, now the curator of butterflies and moths at the University of Florida. Before this, "people had thought that butterflies originated somewhere in Asia." This shift probably took place some 100 million years ago when a rogue lineage of moths moved dayward. The findings, published in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution, shed light on the origins of this remarkable group of insects that now populate the globe with 19,000 different species.

Butterflies first evolved from moths when they began feeding on the nectar of new species of flowering plants usually available during the day. That shift allowed these insects to shed their earth tones in favor of the riot of colors they're known for today, which often act to attract mates or warn predators that they're poisonous.

(snip)

https://www.npr.org/2023/05/16/1176200429/butterflies-originated-in-north-america-after-splitting-from-moths-new-study-sug


Here is the link to the published work - https://www.nature.com/articles/s41559-023-02041-9

And the "map" from that Nature article -

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K&R 2naSalit May 2023 #1
You are welcome! BumRushDaShow May 2023 #2
I have been slamming to get my... 2naSalit May 2023 #3
Ooooo... BumRushDaShow May 2023 #4
Well... 2naSalit May 2023 #6
fascinating mike_c May 2023 #5
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