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Luminescent characteristics and mitochondrial COI barcodes of nine cohabitated Taiwanese fireflies

BACKGROUND: Over 50 Taiwanese firefly species have been discovered, but scientists lack information regarding most of their genetics, bioluminescent features, and cohabitating phenomena. In this study, we focus on morphological species identification and phylogeny reconstructed by COI barcoding, as...

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Autores principales: Goh, King-Siang, Wang, Liang-Jong, Ni, Jing-Han, Wang, Tzi-Yuan
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9620971/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36325176
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.14195
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author Goh, King-Siang
Wang, Liang-Jong
Ni, Jing-Han
Wang, Tzi-Yuan
author_facet Goh, King-Siang
Wang, Liang-Jong
Ni, Jing-Han
Wang, Tzi-Yuan
author_sort Goh, King-Siang
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Over 50 Taiwanese firefly species have been discovered, but scientists lack information regarding most of their genetics, bioluminescent features, and cohabitating phenomena. In this study, we focus on morphological species identification and phylogeny reconstructed by COI barcoding, as well as luminescent characteristics of cohabited Taiwanese firefly species to determine the key factors that influenced how distinct bioluminescent species evolved to coexist and proliferate within the same habitat. METHODS: In this study, 366 specimens from nine species were collected in northern Taiwan from April to August, 2016–2019. First, the species and sex of the specimens were morphologically and genetically identified. Then, their luminescent spectra and intensities were recorded using a spectrometer and a power meter, respectively. The habitat temperature, relative humidity, and environmental light intensity were also measured. The cytochrome oxidase I (COI) gene sequence was used as a DNA barcode to reveal the phylogenetic relationships of cohabitated species. RESULTS: Nine species—eight adult species (Abscondita chinensis, Abscondita cerata, Aquatica ficta, Luciola curtithorax, Luciola kagiana, Luciola filiformis, Curtos sauteri, and Curtos costipennis) and one larval Pyrocoelia praetexta—were morphologically identified. The nine species could be found in April–August. Six of the eight adult species shared an overlap occurrence period in May. Luminescent spectra analysis revealed that the λ(max) of studied species ranged from 552–572 nm (yellow–green to orange–yellow). The average luminescent intensity range of these species was about 1.2–14 lux (182.1–2,048 nW/cm(2)) for males and 0.8–5.8 lux (122.8–850 nW/cm(2)) for females, and the maximum luminescent intensity of males was 1.01–7.26-fold higher than that of females. Compared with previous studies, this study demonstrates that different λ(max), species-specific flash patterns, microhabitat choices, nocturnal activity time, and/or an isolated mating season are key factors that may lead to the species-specific courtship of cohabitated fireflies. Moreover, we estimated that the fireflies start flashing or flying when the environmental light intensity decreased to 6.49–28.1 lux. Thus, based on a rough theoretical calculation, the sensing distance between male and female fireflies might be 1.8–2.7 m apart in the dark. In addition, the mitochondrial COI barcode identified species with high resolution and suggested that most of the studied species have been placed correctly with congeners in previous phylogenies. Several cryptic species were revealed by the COI barcode with 3.27%–12.3% variation. This study renews the idea that fireflies’ luminescence color originated from the green color of a Lampyridae ancestor, then red-shifted to yellow-green in Luciolinae, and further changed to orange–yellow color in some derived species.
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spelling pubmed-96209712022-11-01 Luminescent characteristics and mitochondrial COI barcodes of nine cohabitated Taiwanese fireflies Goh, King-Siang Wang, Liang-Jong Ni, Jing-Han Wang, Tzi-Yuan PeerJ Conservation Biology BACKGROUND: Over 50 Taiwanese firefly species have been discovered, but scientists lack information regarding most of their genetics, bioluminescent features, and cohabitating phenomena. In this study, we focus on morphological species identification and phylogeny reconstructed by COI barcoding, as well as luminescent characteristics of cohabited Taiwanese firefly species to determine the key factors that influenced how distinct bioluminescent species evolved to coexist and proliferate within the same habitat. METHODS: In this study, 366 specimens from nine species were collected in northern Taiwan from April to August, 2016–2019. First, the species and sex of the specimens were morphologically and genetically identified. Then, their luminescent spectra and intensities were recorded using a spectrometer and a power meter, respectively. The habitat temperature, relative humidity, and environmental light intensity were also measured. The cytochrome oxidase I (COI) gene sequence was used as a DNA barcode to reveal the phylogenetic relationships of cohabitated species. RESULTS: Nine species—eight adult species (Abscondita chinensis, Abscondita cerata, Aquatica ficta, Luciola curtithorax, Luciola kagiana, Luciola filiformis, Curtos sauteri, and Curtos costipennis) and one larval Pyrocoelia praetexta—were morphologically identified. The nine species could be found in April–August. Six of the eight adult species shared an overlap occurrence period in May. Luminescent spectra analysis revealed that the λ(max) of studied species ranged from 552–572 nm (yellow–green to orange–yellow). The average luminescent intensity range of these species was about 1.2–14 lux (182.1–2,048 nW/cm(2)) for males and 0.8–5.8 lux (122.8–850 nW/cm(2)) for females, and the maximum luminescent intensity of males was 1.01–7.26-fold higher than that of females. Compared with previous studies, this study demonstrates that different λ(max), species-specific flash patterns, microhabitat choices, nocturnal activity time, and/or an isolated mating season are key factors that may lead to the species-specific courtship of cohabitated fireflies. Moreover, we estimated that the fireflies start flashing or flying when the environmental light intensity decreased to 6.49–28.1 lux. Thus, based on a rough theoretical calculation, the sensing distance between male and female fireflies might be 1.8–2.7 m apart in the dark. In addition, the mitochondrial COI barcode identified species with high resolution and suggested that most of the studied species have been placed correctly with congeners in previous phylogenies. Several cryptic species were revealed by the COI barcode with 3.27%–12.3% variation. This study renews the idea that fireflies’ luminescence color originated from the green color of a Lampyridae ancestor, then red-shifted to yellow-green in Luciolinae, and further changed to orange–yellow color in some derived species. PeerJ Inc. 2022-10-28 /pmc/articles/PMC9620971/ /pubmed/36325176 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.14195 Text en ©2022 Goh et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Conservation Biology
Goh, King-Siang
Wang, Liang-Jong
Ni, Jing-Han
Wang, Tzi-Yuan
Luminescent characteristics and mitochondrial COI barcodes of nine cohabitated Taiwanese fireflies
title Luminescent characteristics and mitochondrial COI barcodes of nine cohabitated Taiwanese fireflies
title_full Luminescent characteristics and mitochondrial COI barcodes of nine cohabitated Taiwanese fireflies
title_fullStr Luminescent characteristics and mitochondrial COI barcodes of nine cohabitated Taiwanese fireflies
title_full_unstemmed Luminescent characteristics and mitochondrial COI barcodes of nine cohabitated Taiwanese fireflies
title_short Luminescent characteristics and mitochondrial COI barcodes of nine cohabitated Taiwanese fireflies
title_sort luminescent characteristics and mitochondrial coi barcodes of nine cohabitated taiwanese fireflies
topic Conservation Biology
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9620971/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36325176
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.14195
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