A global checklist of the Bombycoidea (Insecta: Lepidoptera)

Bombycoidea is an ecologically diverse and speciose superfamily of Lepidoptera. The superfamily includes many model organisms, but the taxonomy and classification of the superfamily has remained largely in disarray. Here we present a global checklist of Bombycoidea. Following Zwick (2008) and Zwick...

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Published inBiodiversity data journal Vol. 6; no. 6; pp. e22236 - 13
Main Authors Kitching, Ian, Rougerie, Rodolphe, Zwick, Andreas, Hamilton, Chris, St Laurent, Ryan, Naumann, Stefan, Ballesteros Mejia, Liliana, Kawahara, Akito
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Bulgaria Pensoft Publishers 12.02.2018
Pensoft
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ISSN1314-2836
1314-2828
1314-2828
DOI10.3897/BDJ.6.e22236

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Summary:Bombycoidea is an ecologically diverse and speciose superfamily of Lepidoptera. The superfamily includes many model organisms, but the taxonomy and classification of the superfamily has remained largely in disarray. Here we present a global checklist of Bombycoidea. Following Zwick (2008) and Zwick et al. (2011), ten families are recognized: Anthelidae, Apatelodidae, Bombycidae, Brahmaeidae, Carthaeidae, Endromidae, Eupterotidae, Phiditiidae, Saturniidae and Sphingidae. The former families Lemoniidae and Mirinidae are included within Brahmaeidae and Endromidae respectively. The former bombycid subfamilies Oberthueriinae and Prismostictinae are also treated as synonyms of Endromidae, and the former bombycine subfamilies Apatelodinae and Phitditiinae are treated as families. This checklist represents the first effort to synthesize the current taxonomic treatment of the entire superfamily. It includes 12,159 names and references to their authors, and it accounts for the recent burst in species and subspecies descriptions within family Saturniidae (ca. 1,500 within the past 10 years) and to a lesser extent in Sphingidae (ca. 250 species over the same period). The changes to the higher classification of Saturniidae proposed by Nässig et al. (2015) are rejected as premature and unnecessary. The new tribes, subtribes and genera described by Cooper (2002) are here treated as junior synonyms. We also present a new higher classification of Sphingidae, based on Kawahara et al. (2009), Barber and Kawahara (2013) and a more recent phylogenomic study by Breinholt et al. (2017), as well as a reviewed genus and species level classification, as documented by Kitching (2018).
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PMCID: PMC5904559
Academic editor: Yasen Mutafchiev
ISSN:1314-2836
1314-2828
1314-2828
DOI:10.3897/BDJ.6.e22236