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Leaf Beetles, a source
of inspiration. Being invited this
year to write the editorial to the Bolleti de la Societat d’Historia Natural de les Balears, I felt a bit
embarrassed and flattered. What really to speak
about ? Sociobiology, altruism, biodiversity, environmental
ethics, cladistics or molecular biology ? No,
I’ll speak about Timarcha, the leaf
beetle I studied all my life and the insect which has actually his best
worshippers in your beautiful archipelago : the professor E. Petitpierre,
C. Juan and J. Gomez-Zurita. The genus Timarcha was named by Latreille in 1829
after an Athenian tribune. Fairmaire in 1868, Chapuis in 1874, Weise in 1882,
de Marseul in 1883 did their best to decipher the difficult taxonomy of the
group. After those, Bechyne came (1948), separated the subgenera and described
many species. Recently Daccordi named several new species from Italy, Corsica
and somewhere else. Balearic islands,
magic lands, what Geisendorf-des Gouttes (1934) named « les Archipels
enchanteurs et farouches » always attracted me. When in october 1951, I
visited them for the first time, I had only one obsession: to see, to study the
beautiful blue Timarcha present in
Mallorca and Menorca and unfortunately missing in other islands. Guided by
Josep Maria Palau, the poet entomologist, I saw them, abundant everywhere and I
reared them in Brussels during several years. Now, I feel nostalgic about the
countryside, the olive trees and Eivissa and Cabrera. The last one, a sad
souvenir for a defeated Napoleonian army. Sociobiology. I don’t believe that Timarcha balearica would
be a model for E.O. Wilson. However Timarcha
adults are certainly attracted to each other in Sicily and Djerba when they
spend the cold winter and early spring under the tufts of Thymelaea. That is only a mutual attraction as that of coccinellids
in temperate areas or of Steno tarsus
rotundus, an Endomychid, under palm
trees in Panama. Strange and still undeciphered mutual attraction of adults
probably under a pheromone influence. I saw one day millions and millions of
small tenebrionids in a forest in Thailand all aggregated against the trunks of
few trees. No apparent reason for this gathering since the weather was warm and
humid. Some larvae of chrysomelids and of other insects, like Pergids, group
them together into a ring. I named that phenomena « cycloalexy », the
ring defence behaviour (Jolivet et al., 1991). Timarcha is far for reaching that intellectual level, but its
simple adult gathering should be restudied. Altruism. So
far Timarcha has never shown altruism
of any kind. They are independent beings, as adults and even larvae. I doubt
that we can find any altruistic motivation in their behaviour. However, among
cycloalexic leaf beetles and sawflies, there seems to be some kind of division
of labour. The larvae around the ring do not mix with the ones inside. They
protect the larvae inside and this way they are helping their brothers and
sisters. There are also the leaders when the larvae go searching for food and
break the rings (Weinstein and Maelzer, 1997) Environmental ethics. Timarcha are endangered species and need to be protected everywhere, namely in
the Balears. Building in some areas should be strictly regulated. It is up to
the authorities to give enough breeding space to this living fossil. Other
species of chrysomelids do not seem to be in danger. Either they are equipped
for flying or their breeding places are not menaced. Biodiversity. Timarcha
are diverse and not less than 12O species and 3O subspecies have been recorded
in the world. When the study will be more precise, many more species remain to
be described. Their distribution, relics of a bigger one in the Pleistocene, is
around the Mediterranean basin, except in Syria, Lebanon and Egypt, where
probably they were eliminated by desertification. They exist also on the
Western coast of the USA and the extreme south of Canada just below the last
Pliocene glaciations. Their diversity is actually endangered because they are
wingless and cannot repopulate fragmented habitats. They are also extremely
sensitive to insecticides. Poor Timarcha,
they probably originated in the Jurassic and they are victim of urbanisation.
Biodiversity of the species, but also diversity of the food habits since
Rubiaceae, Plantaginaceae, Dipsacaceae, Scrophulariaceae, Brassicaceae,
Asteraceae, Rosaceae, Ericaceae can feed some of them but as subgenera and
species they are very specific in their habits. Cladistics and Molecular biology. Fortunately our
chrysomelidologists from Mallorca have tried a cladistics analysis for the Timarcha species, linking the
morphology, the food-habits, the phylogeography, the chromosome numbers and
molecular DNA, to obtain a more coherent classification. As wrote one day one
British, cladistics has been said as being abtruse and severely technical. It
compiles lists of characteristics and search for matches in a rigorous way,
then testing matches against chance occurrences. To me molecular biology seems
to comfort my ideas about morphological classification. Before Farrell (1998)
and Hsiao (1994) have proposed based on DNA an acceptable classification of
Chrysomelidae when others based only on morphology reached only an organized
chaos, at least for me a taxonomic heresy. I hope Petitpierre and his team will
go on this molecular biology analysis and will try to re-enact Farrell
adventure on the evolutionary history of the leaf beetles and will make it
acceptable to the average naturalist. Farrell omitted many basic elements in
his testing. He omitted namely among many others the Timarcha, which combine apomorphic and plesiomorphic characters and
are so evidently primitive on certain sides ( nervous system, male genital
apparatus, etc ..) that they probably deserve a subfamily status
themselves : the Timarchinae. A complete analysis remains a must and the
Balearic team is 100% fit for this experience. Timarcha, with the Jurassic Timarchopsis,
seem to be the dinosaur of the leaf beetles and Crowson shared my ideas in the
past. Your Timarcha in the Balears
show a blue reflection on their dark cover. Others are dark red in Oregon, some
are metallic red in European mountains, one is metallic in Eastern Spain.
Normally they are black in the North African steppes as well as in colder
Europe. They are named in the Balearic Islands: marietas, margolides, monjes,
escarabat de St Joan. Kids in Menorca used to say: « Marieta treu
sang o si no te matare ». Similar rhymes are pronounced by children in
Normandy or elsewhere based on their reflex bleeding. The black insect rejecting
his red blood has always hit the imagination. At least it is a efficient
protection against lizards and birds. Vedi Napoli e poi muori ! So spoke the Italians. I would like one day
before dying to visit again your beautiful islands, to see again in his
environment your beautiful Timarcha,
to join again the olive gatherers in Minorca and to see there the bloody nose
beetles running over the grass below the trees. I still remember in 1951 my
visit of Cabrera with Pere Palau i Ferrer, the botanist, Josep Palau’s father. He
published, I remember, a Flora of Cabrera in Catalan and refused then to have
it translated in any other language, when I offered him to have it published in
English in Brussels. No Timarcha in
the small island and few leaf beetles there, but Timarcha balearica is not
far away outside in the big islands. Cabrera is so wild and beautiful that I
have to see it again at the beginning of the new millennium and to revisit also
the rest of the archipelago. Pierre Jolivet. Farrell, B. D. 1998.
Inordinate fondness explained: Why are so many beetles. Science 281 : 555-559.
Geisendorf-des Gouttes. 1934. Les Archipels Enchanteurs et Farouches. Editions Labor, Genève.1-645. Gomez-Zurita, J., Juan, C. & Petitpierre,
E. 2000. The Evolutionary History
of the Genus Timarcha (Col. Chrys.) inferred from
Mitochondrial COLL Gene and Partial 16SrDNA Sequences. Molecular
Phylogenetics and Evolution 14 (2) :304-317. Gomez-Zurita, J., Petitpierre, E. & Juan,
C. 2000. Nested cladistic
analysis, phylogeography and speciation in the Timarcha goettingensis
complex (Col. Chrys.). Molecular Ecology
9 : 557-570. Hsiao, T. H. 1994.
Molecular phylogeny of chrysomelid beetles inferred from mitochondrial DNA
data. Proc. 3rd.
Int. Symp. Chrys. Beijing 1992. Furth, D. G. (ed.) Backhuys publs., Leiden : 9-17. Jolivet, P. 1953. Les Chrysomeloidea (Col.) des îles Baléares. Mém. Inst. R. Sc. Nat. Belgique (2°sér.) 50 : 1-88. Jolivet, P. 1994. Remarks
on the biology and biogeography of Timarcha
(Col. Chrys.). Proc. 3rd.
Int. Symp. Chrys. Beijing. 1992. Furth, D. G. (ed.). Backhuys publ.,
Leiden : 85-97. Jolivet, P. 1999.
Timarchophilia or Timarchomania. Reflexions on the genus Timarcha (Col.
Chrys.). Nouv. Rev. Ent. (N.S.) 16 (1) : 11-18. Jolivet, P.,
Vasconcellos-Neto, J. and Weinstein, P. 1991. Cycloalexy : a new concept
in the larval defence of insects. Insecta Mundi
4 : 133-142. Weinstein, P. and
Maelzer, D. A. 1997. Leadership
behavior in sawfly larvae Perga dorsalis. Oikos 79 : 450-455. Pierre Jolivet.
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