Daniel H. Janzen

Daniel H. Janzen

University of Pennsylvania

H-index: 125

North America-United States

Professor Information

University

University of Pennsylvania

Position

Professor of Biology; Thomas G. and Louise E. DiMaura Term Chair at

Citations(all)

78780

Citations(since 2020)

16749

Cited By

70611

hIndex(all)

125

hIndex(since 2020)

58

i10Index(all)

397

i10Index(since 2020)

187

Email

University Profile Page

University of Pennsylvania

Research & Interests List

ecology and biodiversity of ecosystems

Top articles of Daniel H. Janzen

What one genus of showy moths can say about migration, adaptation, and wing pattern

The Ornate Moth, Utetheisa ornatrix, has served as a model species in chemical ecology studies for decades. Like in the widely publicized stories of the Monarch and other milkweed butterflies, the Ornate Moth and its relatives are tropical insects colonizing whole continents assisted by their chemical defenses. With the recent advances in genomic techniques and evo-devo research, it is becoming a model for studies in other areas, from wing pattern development to phylogeography, from toxicology to epigenetics. We used a genomic approach to learn about Utetheisa’s evolution, detoxification, dispersal abilities, and wing pattern diversity. We present an evolutionary genomic analysis of the worldwide genus Utetheisa, then focusing on U. ornatrix. Our reference genome of U. ornatrix reveals gene duplications in the regions possibly associated with detoxification abilities, which allows them to feed on toxic food …

Authors

Jing Zhang,Qian Cong,Jinhui Shen,Leina Song,Winnie Hallwachs,Daniel H Janzen,Andrei Sourakov,Nick V Grishin

Journal

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Published Date

2024/4/23

Revision of Belvosia Robineau-Desvoidy (Diptera, Tachinidae) and 33 new species from Area de Conservación Guanacaste in northwestern Costa Rica with a key to known North and …

BackgroundThis revision is part of a continuing series of taxonomic work aimed at the description of new taxa and the redescription of known taxa of the Tachinidae of Area de Conservación Guanacaste in northwestern Costa Rica. Here we describe 33 new species in the genus Belvosia Robineau-Desvoidy, 1830 (Diptera: Tachinidae). All species described here were reared from this ongoing inventory of wild-caught caterpillars spanning a variety of families (Lepidoptera: Erebidae, Eupterotidae, Noctuidae, Notodontidae, Saturniidae, and Sphingidae). We provide a morphological description of each species with limited information on life history, molecular data, and photographic documentation. In addition to the new species, the authors provide a redescription of the genus Belvosia, as well as provide a key to the identification of the species present in the Meso-and North-American fauna.

Authors

AJ Fleming,Norman Woodley,M Alex Smith,Winnie Hallwachs,Daniel H Janzen

Journal

Biodiversity Data Journal

Published Date

2023

 The wing interference patterns (WIPs) of Parapanteles (Braconidae, Microgastrinae): demonstrating a powerful and accessible tool for species-level identification of small and …

Wing interference patterns (WIPs) are color patterns of insect wings caused by thin film interference. Thin film interference is the same phenomenon responsible for the refracted spectral colors sometimes visible on soap bubbles. Insect WIPs are static patterns due to the variable thickness of wing membranes and the colors produced depend on the thicknesses of wing membranes. While WIPs have been studied in several taxa of small insects, they have not been broadly adopted by insect taxonomists. We surveyed WIPs in one moderate-sized genus of parasitoid wasps, Parapanteles (Braconidae: Microgastrinae). Using an inexpensive microscope camera set-up and free imaging and analysis software, we detected consistent WIP differences between Parapanteles species. In some cases, WIPs can be used to diagnose sibling species that would otherwise require SEM images to differentiate or DNA barcodes. Wing interference patters are an underemployed character that may be similarly useful in many other taxa of small clear-winged insects.

Authors

Shuyang Jin,Kyle S Parks,Daniel H Janzen,Winnie Hallwachs,Lee A Dyer,James B Whitfield

Journal

Journal of Hymenoptera Research

Published Date

2023/11/13

Going for a Ridens Evans (Lepidoptera: Hesperiidae: Eudaminae): A New Species Reared in Area De Conservacion Guanacaste, Northwestern Costa Rica

Ridens is a genus of about 20 described species of neotropical skipper butterflies to which we add Ridens conservationinternationalis Burns and Grishin, new species. We describe it from wild-caught caterpillars, what they eat, pupae, reared adults, genitalia, nuclear and mitochondrial genomes, and the Z chromosome. The type-series of this skipper comes from mid-elevation (510–980 m) rain forest on the Caribbean slope of the Cordillera Guanacaste in northwestern Costa Rica. (One male has been taken in Darien in eastern Panama.) To date, caterpillars have been found on just three species in two genera (Persea and Beilschmiedia) of Lauraceae. The head of immature stages is unusual with respect to larval color pattern and pupal morphology. Adult facies differs from those of congeners, and male genitalia differ sharply from those of the other species of Ridens reared in Area de Conservation Guanacaste …

Authors

John M Burns,Daniel H Janzen,Winnie Hallwachs,Nick V Grishin

Journal

Proceedings of the Entomological Society of Washington

Published Date

2023/7

Anurocampa (Lepidoptera: Notodontidae): two new species, systematics and immature stages.

Notodontidae (Lepidoptera, Noctuoidea) comprise over 4,000 described species distributed worldwide, among which nearly half are restricted to the Neotropics. Morphology of adults and immatures of Notodontidae have been broadly investigated and many larval, pupal, and adult characters were found to be synapomorphies of subfamilies and tribes. Despite this, the current classification of Notodontidae remains unsettled as most recent classification systems are contradictory due to reliance on incomplete global sampling and, many taxa, especially in the Neotropics, are still informally classified as incertae sedis. Anurocampa Herrich-Shäffer was recently treated as an incertae sedis genus, and immature and adult characters may provide further evidence for its systematic position among the Notodontidae. With this goal in mind, the present study describes the immature stages of Anurocampa mingens Herrich-Shäffer from Brazil and describes two new species in the genus from Costa Rica based on morphology and mitochondrial DNA: Anurocampa markhastingsi Chacón and St Laurent sp. nov. and Anurocampa abelardochaconi Chacón and St Laurent sp. nov. and discusses the systematic position of Anurocampa.

Authors

Elton Orlandin,RAS Laurent,MÔNICA Piovesan,WINNIE Hallwachs,ISIDRO Chacón,Daniel Janzen,EDUARDO Carneiro

Journal

Zootaxa

Published Date

2023/6/22

Yeasts from tropical forests: Biodiversity, ecological interactions, and as sources of bioinnovation

Tropical rainforests and related biomes are found in Asia, Australia, Africa, Central and South America, Mexico, and many Pacific Islands. These biomes encompass less than 20% of Earth's terrestrial area, may contain about 50% of the planet's biodiversity, and are endangered regions vulnerable to deforestation. Tropical rainforests have a great diversity of substrates that can be colonized by yeasts. These unicellular fungi contribute to the recycling of organic matter, may serve as a food source for other organisms, or have ecological interactions that benefit or harm plants, animals, and other fungi. In this review, we summarize the most important studies of yeast biodiversity carried out in these biomes, as well as new data, and discuss the ecology of yeast genera frequently isolated from tropical forests and the potential of these microorganisms as a source of bioinnovation. We show that tropical forest biomes …

Authors

Carlos A Rosa,Marc‐André Lachance,Savitree Limtong,Ana RO Santos,Melissa F Landell,Andreas K Gombert,Paula B Morais,José P Sampaio,Carla Gonçalves,Paula Gonçalves,Aristóteles Góes‐Neto,Rosângela Santa‐Brígida,Marlúcia B Martins,Daniel H Janzen,Winnie Hallwachs

Published Date

2023/11

A global phylogeny of butterflies reveals their evolutionary history, ancestral hosts and biogeographic origins

Butterflies are a diverse and charismatic insect group that are thought to have evolved with plants and dispersed throughout the world in response to key geological events. However, these hypotheses have not been extensively tested because a comprehensive phylogenetic framework and datasets for butterfly larval hosts and global distributions are lacking. We sequenced 391 genes from nearly 2,300 butterfly species, sampled from 90 countries and 28 specimen collections, to reconstruct a new phylogenomic tree of butterflies representing 92% of all genera. Our phylogeny has strong support for nearly all nodes and demonstrates that at least 36 butterfly tribes require reclassification. Divergence time analyses imply an origin ~100 million years ago for butterflies and indicate that all but one family were present before the K/Pg extinction event. We aggregated larval host datasets and global distribution records and …

Authors

Akito Y Kawahara,Caroline Storer,Ana Paula S Carvalho,David M Plotkin,Fabien L Condamine,Mariana P Braga,Emily A Ellis,Ryan A St Laurent,Xuankun Li,Vijay Barve,Liming Cai,Chandra Earl,Paul B Frandsen,Hannah L Owens,Wendy A Valencia-Montoya,Kwaku Aduse-Poku,Emmanuel FA Toussaint,Kelly M Dexter,Tenzing Doleck,Amanda Markee,Rebeccah Messcher,Y-Lan Nguyen,Jade Aster T Badon,Hugo A Benítez,Michael F Braby,Perry AC Buenavente,Wei-Ping Chan,Steve C Collins,Richard A Rabideau Childers,Even Dankowicz,Rod Eastwood,Zdenek F Fric,Riley J Gott,Jason PW Hall,Winnie Hallwachs,Nate B Hardy,Rachel L Hawkins Sipe,Alan Heath,Jomar D Hinolan,Nicholas T Homziak,Yu-Feng Hsu,Yutaka Inayoshi,Micael GA Itliong,Daniel H Janzen,Ian J Kitching,Krushnamegh Kunte,Gerardo Lamas,Michael J Landis,Elise A Larsen,Torben B Larsen,Jing V Leong,Vladimir Lukhtanov,Crystal A Maier,Jose I Martinez,Dino J Martins,Kiyoshi Maruyama,Sarah C Maunsell,Nicolás Oliveira Mega,Alexander Monastyrskii,Ana BB Morais,Chris J Müller,Mark Arcebal K Naive,Gregory Nielsen,Pablo Sebastián Padrón,Djunijanti Peggie,Helena Piccoli Romanowski,Szabolcs Sáfián,Motoki Saito,Stefan Schröder,Vaughn Shirey,Doug Soltis,Pamela Soltis,Andrei Sourakov,Gerard Talavera,Roger Vila,Petr Vlasanek,Houshuai Wang,Andrew D Warren,Keith R Willmott,Masaya Yago,Walter Jetz,Marta A Jarzyna,Jesse W Breinholt,Marianne Espeland,Leslie Ries,Robert P Guralnick,Naomi E Pierce,David J Lohman

Journal

Nature ecology & evolution

Published Date

2023/6

Minimalist revision of Mesochorus Gravenhorst, 1829 (Hymenoptera: Ichneumonidae: Mesochorinae) from Área de Conservación Guanacaste, Costa Rica, with 158 new species and host …

Abstract Introduction: Species of Mesochorus are found worldwide and members of this genus are primarily hyperparasitoids of Ichneumonoidea and Tachinidae. Objectives: To describe species of Costa Rican Mesochorus reared from caterpillars and to a lesser extent Malaise-trapped. Methods: The species are diagnosed by COI mtDNA barcodes, morphological inspection, and host data. A suite of images and host data (plant, caterpillar, and primary parasitoid) are provided for each species. Results: A total of 158 new species of Mesochorus. Sharkey is the taxonomic authority for all. Conclusions: This demonstrates a practical application of DNA barcoding that can be applied to the masses of undescribed neotropical insect species in hyperdiverse groups.

Authors

Michael-J Sharkey,Austin Baker,Kathryn McCluskey,Alex Smith,Suresh Naik,Sujeevan Ratnasingham,Ramya Manjunath,Kate Perez,Jayme Sones,Michelle D’souza,Brianne St-Jacques,Mehrdad Hajibabaei,Jim Whitfield,Diana Arias,Alma Solis,Mark Metz,John Burns,Ronald Zuñiga,Eugenie Phillips-Rodriguez,Bernardo Espinoza,Isidro Chacon,Paul Hebert,Winnie Hallwachs,Daniel Janzen

Journal

Revista de Biología Tropical

Published Date

2023/8

Professor FAQs

What is Daniel H. Janzen's h-index at University of Pennsylvania?

The h-index of Daniel H. Janzen has been 58 since 2020 and 125 in total.

What are Daniel H. Janzen's research interests?

The research interests of Daniel H. Janzen are: ecology and biodiversity of ecosystems

What is Daniel H. Janzen's total number of citations?

Daniel H. Janzen has 78,780 citations in total.

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