Mitochondrial DNA. Part B. Resources (Jul 2020)

It’s a moth! It’s a butterfly! It’s the complete mitochondrial genome of the American moth-butterfly Macrosoma conifera (Warren, 1897) (Insecta: Lepidoptera: Hedylidae)!

  • Bonnie S. McCullagh,
  • Mackenzie R. Alexiuk,
  • Josephine E. Payment,
  • Rayna V. Hamilton,
  • Melanie M. L. Lalonde,
  • Jeffrey M. Marcus

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/23802359.2020.1831991
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 3
pp. 3615 – 3617

Abstract

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The taxonomic placement of the moth-butterfly, Macrosoma conifera (Warren 1897) (Lepidoptera: Hedylidae), has been controversial. The 15,344 bp complete M. conifera circular mitogenome, assembled by genome skimming, consists of 81.7% AT nucleotides, 22 tRNAs, 13 protein-coding genes, 2 rRNAs and a control region in the typical butterfly gene order. Macrosoma conifera COX1 features an atypical CGA start codon while ATP6, COX1, COX2, and ND5 exhibit incomplete stop codons completed by the post-transcriptional addition of 3′ A residues. Phylogenetic reconstruction places M. conifera as sister to the skippers (Hesperiidae), which is consistent with several recent phylogenetic analyses.

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