@article {Pellmyr:January 2006:0307-6970:1, author = "Pellmyr, Olle", author = "Balcazar-Lara, Manuel", author = "Althoff, David M.", author = "Segraves, Kari A.", author = "Leebens-Mack, James", title = "Phylogeny and life history evolution of Prodoxus yucca moths (Lepidoptera: Prodoxidae)", journal = "Systematic Entomology", volume = "31", year = "January 2006", abstract = ".
Yucca moths (Lep., Prodoxidae) are well-known for their obligate pollination mutualism with yuccas. In addition to the pollinators, yuccas also host many non-pollinating yucca moths. Here the genus Prodoxus, the non-pollinating sister group of the pollinators, is revised using morphological and molecular data, their phylogenetic relationships are analysed, and the evolution of host tissue specialization explored. Twenty-two species are recognized, including nine new species: Prodoxus gypsicolorsp.n., P. sonorensissp.n., P. carnerosanellussp.n., P. tamaulipellussp.n., P. weethumpisp.n., P. tehuacanensissp.n., P. californicussp.n., P. mapimiensissp.n. and P. atascosanellussp.n.Prodoxus y-inversus Riley, P. coloradensis Riley and P. sordidus Riley are redescribed. The genus Agavenema is synonymized with Prodoxus. Phylogenetic analyses indicated that stalk-feeding is basal within the group, that there are three separate origins of fruit-feeding, and one origin of leaf-mining from a stalk-feeding ancestor. Although species with different feeding habits often coexist within hosts, the analyses suggest that ecological specialization and diversification within a host only may have occurred within one or possibly two hosts.", pages = "1-20(20)", url = "http://www.ingentaconnect.com/content/bsc/sent/2006/00000031/00000001/art00001" doi = "doi:10.1111/j.1365-3113.2005.00301.x" }