Overview

Brief Summary

Introduction

Prodoxus - the "bogus yucca moths" of Riley - are small to medium-sized moths that coexist on yuccas with the pollinating yucca moths, Tegeticula and Parategeticula, but have received far less attention. The most obvious difference from the pollinators is the complete lack of tentacular appendages on the maxillary palps. There are currently 10 described species, but many more are in the process of description.

The larvae of Prodoxus feed on vegetative parts of their hosts, and they are highly specific in what tissues are utilized. Different species specialize on the inflorescence stalk, non-seed parts of fruits, or leaf tissue (Davis 1967, Wagner & Powell 1988). There is evidence of resource partitioning among the different species (Powell & Mackie 1966, Powell 1992), and some yucca species can have up to three Prodoxus simultaneously utilizing different parts. All species complete their entire development inside the host tissue, and only emerge as adults.

This genus contains species that often display prolonged diapause (Riley 1894, Powell 1986). In fact, the most extended reported diapause of any insect is that of Prodoxus y-inversus; moths were still emerging in 1988 after 19 years of larval diapause (Powell 1989), and more larvae remain in diapause in Jerry Powell's lab.

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Comprehensive Description

Life habits of immature stages

Females oviposit into the host substrate, which is a peduncle, a young fruit, or a leaf surface, depending on the species. The small grublike larvae, which are white but often turn green when maturing, feed inside the host tissue. Upon maturity, the larva creates a path to the surface and prepares a cocoon inside the feeding gallery. Diapause can last for one or many years. Pupae have a prominent frontal "ramrod" used to pierce the operculum before adult eclosion.

Pupal exuviae or P. phylloryctus protruding from a Y. baccata leaf.

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Characteristics

Prodoxus is readily distinguished from coexisting pollinating Tegeticula by the absence of complete or vestigial maxillary tentacles in the female and by the absence of pollex. Armature on valvae can instead be a series of blunt spines along the outer edge, or be missing altogether.

Frack provided a number of synapomorphies in the immature stages for Prodoxus and Agavenema, the latter of which may be nested within Prodoxus (Brown et al 1994):

  • larval thoracic legs lost
  • three stemmata (six in other prodoxids)
  • setae A1-A3 in the larva forming a right angle (rather than a line
  • seta F1 in the larva dorsal (rather than lateral) to pore Fa
  • XD group of setae separated, rather than adjacent to each other
  • SV group of setae on larval abdominal segments 3-6 unisetose

In addition, these taxa are the only ones that show:

  • pupation inside the host gallery.

Only one trait was listed by Frack as defining Prodoxus from Agavenema:

  • larval abdominal seta L1 absent

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Distribution

Geographic distribution

The range of Prodoxus closely matches the extant distribution of their yucca hosts. This includes the extended ranges of yuccas in interior eastern North America, where European settlers introduced yuccas over the last 150 years. The northern limit of the genus is probably in southern Alberta in Canada. The southernmost records are from the state of Veracruz, Mexico (Davis 1967).

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Evolution and Systematics

Evolution

Discussion of Phylogenetic Relationships

View Prodoxus Tree

Consensus based on Davis (1967) and Frack (1982)

The topology above is based on a pre-cladistic phylogeny by Davis (1967) and a cladistic analysis by Frack (1982). The latter provided far less resolution. The phylogenies are concordant in making the three species that feed on Y. whipplei a monophyletic group, and in uniting two species that feed on summer-flowering, fleshy-fruited yuccas.

A phylogenetic revision of this genus is under way, with a fair number of undescribed species to be included.

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Molecular Biology and Genetics

Barcode

Locations of barcode samples

Collection Sites: world map showing specimen collection locations for Prodoxus
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)

© Barcode of Life Data Systems

Source: Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD)

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Statistics of barcoding coverage

Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD) Stats
                                                             
Specimen Records:78
Specimens with Sequences:75
Specimens with Barcodes:75
Public Records:67
Species:22
Species With Barcodes:22
  
Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)

© Barcode of Life Data Systems

Source: Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD)

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Barcode data

Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 (CC BY 3.0)

© Barcode of Life Data Systems

Source: Barcode of Life Data Systems (BOLD)

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Wikipedia

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