occurrenceID	taxonID	catalogNumber	collectionCode	institutionCode	typeStatus	verbatimLabel	sex	individualCount	eventDate	recordedBy	recordNumber	decimalLatitude	decimalLongitude	minimumElevationInMeters	maximumElevationInMeters	minimumDepthInMeters	maximumDepthInMeters	country	stateProvince	municipality	locality	references	associatedOccurrences	associatedReferences	associatedSequences	basisOfRecord
03E187EFFFB6AE49FF09B84E1D5B1CF1.mc.3B203CA4FFB6AE49FCA9BD451DE719B2	03E187EFFFB6AE49FF09B84E1D5B1CF1.taxon			IIIL		one female infected with an unidentified mermithid nematode (Mermithidae). Homologs were tightly paired (98 – 100 %). All larvae had the standard chromosomal banding sequence for the Southeast Asian S. tuberosum lineage (sensu Adler et al. 2016 c) and were also fixed for IIIL- 8, IIIL- 11, and IIIL- 13 (Fig. 3). All larvae additionally had either of two mutually exclusive fixed-inversion sequences in the IIIL arm: IIIL- 64 or IIIL- 96 (Fig. 3). The complete absence of individuals heterozygous for either of these inversions indicated the presence of two separate breeding populations (i. e., species): 57.9 % (35 females and 27 males) with IIIL- 64 and 42.1 % (24 females and 21 males) with IIIL- 96 (Table 2). A presorted subsample of 33 final-instar larvae yielded 82 % correct assignment to one or the other chromosomal sequences, with IIIL- 64 representing the largest larvae (94 % correct, n = 18) and IIIL- 96 the smallest (67 % correct, n = 15). Larvae of intermediate size carried either IIIL- 64 or IIIL- 96, indicating considerable size overlap	female	107														https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E187EFFFB6AE49FF09B84E1D5B1CF1#3B203CA4FFB6AE49FCA9BD451DE719B2				MaterialCitation
03E187EFFFB6AE49FF09B84E1D5B1CF1.mc.3B203CA4FFB6AE49FCC9BB531C741EE7	03E187EFFFB6AE49FF09B84E1D5B1CF1.taxon			IIIL		A small subterminal inversion, IIIL - 10 (Fig. 3 D), was distributed nonrandomly among larvae (Table 3). Most of the 27 males (90.9 %) with the IIIL- 64 sequence carried IIIL - 10 heterozygously. The remaining 9.1 % of males with IIIL- 64, plus all males with IIIL- 96 and all females, lacked the inversion. IIIL - 10, therefore, marked a differentiated Y chromosome (Y 1) in males with IIIL- 64	male	27														https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E187EFFFB6AE49FF09B84E1D5B1CF1#3B203CA4FFB6AE49FCC9BB531C741EE7				MaterialCitation
03E187EFFFB6AE49FF09B84E1D5B1CF1.mc.3B203CA4FFB6AE49FABBBBC01DE61F37	03E187EFFFB6AE49FF09B84E1D5B1CF1.taxon	IIIL 100		IIIL		the remainder (9.1 %) of the males with IIIL- 64 were, thus, Y 0. IIIL- 64 females (n = 35) were either standard (X 0, 77.1 %) for section 100 of IIIL or had heteroband 100 hb 1 (X 1, 22.9 %). Two males were heterozygous for IIIL - 10 and IIIL 100 hb 1, but on different homologs, and were, therefore, X 1 Y 1. All individuals with IIIL- 96 had cytologically undifferentiated sex chromosomes (X 0 Y 0)	female	64														https://treatment.plazi.org/id/03E187EFFFB6AE49FF09B84E1D5B1CF1#3B203CA4FFB6AE49FABBBBC01DE61F37				MaterialCitation
