ARPHA Preprints, doi: 10.3897/arphapreprints.e60028
A global food plant dataset for wild silkmoths and hawkmoths, and its use in documenting polyphagy of their caterpillars (Lepidoptera: Bombycoidea: Saturniidae, Sphingidae)
expand article infoLiliana Ballesteros Mejia§|, Pierre Arnal§, Winnie Hallwachs, Jean Haxaire#¤, Daniel Janzen«, Ian J. Kitching», Rodolphe Rougerie˄
‡ CESAB, Centre de Synthèse et d’Analyse sur la Biodiversité, Montpellier, France§ Institut de Systématique, Evolution, Biodiversité (ISYEB), Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, CNRS,Sorbonne Université, EPHE, Université des Antilles (1st authorship shared between the first two authors), Paris, France| Ecologie, Systématique and Evolution, Université Paris-Sud, CNRS, AgroParisTech, Université Paris-Saclay, Orsay, France¶ Department of Biology, University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States of America# Correspondent of Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, Paris, France¤ Associate researcher of Insectarium de Montréal, Quebec, Canada« University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, United States of America» Department of Life Sciences, Natural History Museum, London, United Kingdom˄ Muséum national d'Histoire Naturelle, Paris, France
Open Access
Abstract

Herbivorous insects represent a major fraction of global biodiversity and the relationships they have established with their food plants range from strict specialists to broad generalists. Our knowledge of these relationships is of primary importance to basic (e.g. the study of insect ecology and evolution) and applied biology (e.g. monitoring of pest or invasive species), and yet remains very fragmentary and understudied. In Lepidoptera, caterpillars of families Saturniidae and Sphingidae are rather well known and considered to have adopted contrasting preferences in their use of food plants. The former are regarded as being rather generalist feeders, whereas the latter are more specialist.

To assemble and synthesize the vast amount of existing data on food plants of Lepidoptera families Saturniidae and Sphingidae, we combined three major existing databases to produce a dataset collating more than 26,000 records for 1256 species (25% of all species) in 121 (67%) and 167 (81%) genera of Saturniidae and Sphingidae, respectively. This dataset is used here to document the level of polyphagy of each of these genera using summary statistics as well as the calculation of a polyphagy score derived from the analysis of Phylogenetic Diversity of the food plants used by the species in each genus.

Keywords
Lepidoptera, food plant, ecology, life-history traits, caterpillar, polyphagy,