“…They concluded that, within the ''traditional'' obscura subgroup (sensu Sturtevant, 1942), there were two distinct lineages of Nearctic species and several lineages of Palearctic species. Research conducted in the past 25 years, including allozyme electrophoresis (reviewed in Lakovaara and Saura, 1982), mitochondrial restriction site analysis (Latorre et al, 1988;Gonzalez et al, 1990;Barrio et al, 1992), polytene chromosome phylogenies (Brehm et al, 1991), DNA-DNA hybridization (Goddard et al, 1990), and nucleotide sequences (Beckenbach et al, 1993;Barrio et al, 1994;Russo et al, 1995;Barrio and Ayala, 1997), has refined our view of evolution in the obscura group. In their review of the obscura group phylogeny, Lakovaara and Saura (1982) summarized these data and indicated that the obscura subgroup can be divided into two subgroups, obscura and pseudoobscura (Fig.…”