| Literature DB >> 21521138 |
John W Brown1, Ricardo Segura, Quiyari Santiago-Jiménez, Jadranka Rota, Tim A Heard.
Abstract
As part of efforts to identify native herbivores of Mexican palo verde, Parkinsonia aculeata L. (Leguminosae: Caesalpinioideae), as potential biological control agents against this invasive weed in Australia, ten species of Tortricidae (Lepidoptera) were reared from Guatemala, Mexico, Nicaragua, and Venezuela: Amorbia concavana (Zeller), Platynota rostrana (Walker), Platynota helianthes (Meyrick), Platynota stultana Walsingham (all Tortricinae: Sparganothini), Rudenia leguminana (Busck), Cochylis sp. (both Tortricinae: Cochylini), Ofatulena duodecemstriata (Walsingham), O. luminosa Heinrich, Ofatulena sp. (all Olethreutinae: Grapholitini), and Crocidosema lantana Busck (Olethreutinae: Eucosmini). Significant geographic range extensions are provided for O. duodecemstriata and R. leguminana. These are the first documented records of P. aculeata as a host plant for all but O. luminosa. The four species of Sparganothini are polyphagous; in contrast, the two Cochylini and three Grapholitini likely are specialists on Leguminosae. Ofatulena luminosa is possibly host specific on P. aculeata. Host trials with Rudenia leguminana also provide some evidence of specificity, in contrast to historical rearing records. To examine the possibility that R. leguminana is a complex of species, two data sets of molecular markers were examined: (1) a combined data set of two mitochondrial markers (a 781-basepair region of cytochrome c oxidase I (COI) and a 685-basepair region of cytochrome c oxidase II) and one nuclear marker (a 531-basepair region of the 28S domain 2); and (2) the 650-basepair "barcode" region of COI. Analyses of both data sets strongly suggest that individuals examined in this study belong to more than one species.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21521138 PMCID: PMC3281301 DOI: 10.1673/031.011.0107
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Insect Sci ISSN: 1536-2442 Impact factor: 1.857
Adult emergence of “no choice” host specificity trials of Rudenia leguminana from six plant species (as recorded per individual plant).
Evolutionary distances among individuals from Data Set I for the COI marker. Distances between individuals from the same locality are in bold.
Evolutionary distances between individuals from the same area and between groups from more distant areas in Data Set I.
Figure 15. Bayesian tree based on Data Set II. Numbers below branches are posterior probabilities. Circled clades (A, B, and C) are postulated to be different species. Abbreviations are as follows: USPS abbreviation for the U.S. states, Guatemala (GT), Mexico (MX), Mexico Oaxaca (MX, OA), Mexico Veracruz (MX, VE), and VE (Venezuela). High quality figures are available online.
Evolutionary distances within and among species A, B, C (see Fig. 15) in Data Set II.
Density of O. luminosa larval damage in the field at La Muralla and El Caracol.
Related legumes growing in the same habitat as Parkinsonia.