“…They are also particularly diverse in tropical forests (Kaszab, ; Yeates et al , ; Matthews & Bouchard, ), with many groups having exclusive pantropical distributions (Matthews et al , ). Because of their worldwide distribution and their high level of diversity, they have become the focus of numerous studies in evolutionary biology (Papadopoulou et al , , ; Condamine et al , ; Lamb & Bond, ), island biogeography (Juan et al , , ,b; Rees et al , ), macroecology (De Los Santos et al , ; Carrara & Flores, ; Fattorini & Ulrich, ; Fattorini, ), developmental biology (Ohde et al , ) and conservation biology (Fattorini, , ; Cárdenas et al , ; Fattorini & Baselga, ). In addition, the numerous disjunct distribution patterns recovered in many tenebrionid groups (e.g.…”