Talk:Polyura alphius

Latest comment: 6 years ago by Notafly in topic Questions from a poor ignorant copy editor

Questions from a poor ignorant copy editor edit

I'm just a copy editor. I've never been taught taxonomy. I'm learning as I go.

Does this stub article make sense as it is now? Isn't either Polyura alphius or Charaxes alphius correct and the other a synonym? What does it mean when we have one as the article title, the other in the taxobox and subspecies, and Charaxes (Polyura) alphius in the lead?

Please educate me, recommend books, clarify. Thank you.  SchreiberBike | ⌨  04:00, 1 November 2017 (UTC)Reply

@Notafly and Ruigeroeland: Are we treating Polyura as a subgenus of Charaxes? Same issue at Polyura narcaeus, Polyura nepenthes, Polyura posidonius, Polyura andrewsi, Polyura caphontis, Polyura clitarchus, Polyura cognatus, Polyura dehanii, Polyura epigenes, Polyura gamma, Polyura gilolensis, Polyura inopinatus, Polyura pyrrhus and Polyura sacco. Thanks,  SchreiberBike | ⌨  18:57, 1 November 2017 (UTC)Reply

Since the advent of DNA studies (and before that cladistics) many placements have changed. The key work here is Aduse-Poku, K., Vingerhoedt, E., & Wahlberg, N. (2009). Out-of-Africa again: A phylogenetic hypothesis of the genus Charaxes(Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) based on five gene regions. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 53(2), 463-478. (see the Polyura page). Nicholas Wahlberg's Nymphalid group "leads" here and most accept any changes. These may or may not prove robust.In this schema both Euxanthe and Polyura are subgenera of Charaxes.My own view is that Charaxes already contains too many species to be useful and there is an argument for elevating the species groups but this too creates nomenclatural instability.I will reply further later.A book? Hard to recommmend. Phylogenetics and nomenclature should match but seldom do.I can't think of a work that addresses this and can't remember the author of the most relative paper or it's title Best regards Notafly (talk) 12:29, 2 November 2017 (UTC)Reply

PS Look at the title of Aduse-Poku, K., Vingerhoedt, E., & Wahlberg, N. and note "based on five gene regions. What happens if you use six or four?

As to article titles I just filled the red link which led to the article title hence the inconsistency. Lets see what Ruigeroeland has to say.

Niklas Wahlberg edit

Here is the abstract Despite the long popularity of Charaxes among collectors and researchers, their evolutionary history is largely unknown. The current and accepted species groupings and relationships within the genus are based exclusively on adult morphology and life histories. Here, we examine the monophyly and evolutionary affinities of the species-groups within the genus Charaxes and explore how they relate to members of their closest genera (Euxanthe, Polyura and Palla) using 4167bp of sequence data from five (1 mitochondrial and 4 nuclear) gene regions. Within the proposed phylogenetic framework, we estimate ages of divergence within the genus and also reconstruct their historical biogeography. We included representatives of all known species-groups in Africa and Asia, all known species of Euxanthe and Palla and two exemplar species of Polyura. We found the genus Charaxes to be a paraphyletic group with regard to the genera Polyura and Euxanthe, contrary to the earlier assumption of monophyly. We found that 13 out of 16 morphologically defined species-groups with more than one species were strongly supported monophyletic clades. Charaxes nichetes is the sister group to all the other Charaxes. Polyura grouped with the Zoolina and Pleione species-groups as a well-supported clade, and Euxanthe grouped with the Lycurgus species-group. Our results indicated that the common ancestor of Charaxes diverged from the common ancestor of Palla in the mid Eocene (45 million years ago) in (Central) Africa and began diversifying to its extant members 15 million years later. Most of the major diversifications within the genus occurred between the late Oligocene and Miocene when the global climates were putatively undergoing drastic fluctuations. A considerable number of extant species diverged from sister species during the Pliocene. A dispersal-vicariance analysis suggests that many dispersal rather than vicariance events resulted in the distribution of the extant species. The genus Polyura and the Indo-Australian Charaxes are most likely the results of three independent colonizations of Asia by African Charaxes in the Miocene. We synonymize the genera Polyura (syn. nov.) and Euxanthe (syn. nov.) with Charaxes, with the currently circumscribed Charaxes subdivided into five subgenera to reflect its phylogeny.

Out-of-Africa again: A phylogenetic hypothesis of the genus Charaxes (Lepidoptera: Nymphalidae) based on five gene regions. Available from: https://www.researchgate.net/publication/26650712_Out-of-Africa_again_A_phylogenetic_hypothesis_of_the_genus_Charaxes_Lepidoptera_Nymphalidae_based_on_five_gene_regions [accessed Nov 02 2017].

Notice "two exemplar species of Polyura