| Literature DB >> 26467727 |
Tracie M Jenkins Jenkins1, Tyler D Eaton2.
Abstract
The stink bug, Megacopta cribraria, has an obligate relationship with a bacterial endosymbiont which allows it to feed on legumes. The insect is a pest of soybeans in Asia and was first reported in the Western Hemisphere in October 2009 on kudzu vine, Pueraria montana, in North Georgia, USA. By October 2010 M. cribraria had been confirmed in 80 counties in Georgia actively feeding on kudzu vine and soybean plants. Since the symbiosis may support the bug's ecological expansions, a population genetic baseline for the symbiosis was developed from mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) and nuclear DNA (nuDNA) gene sequence collected from each insect and its primary g- proteobacterium and secondary a -proteobacterium endosymbionts. A single mitochondrial DNA haplotype was found in all insects sampled in Georgia and South Carolina identified as GA1. The GAI haplotype appears to be rapidly dispersing across Georgia and into contiguous states. Primary and secondary endosymbiont gene sequences from M. cribraria in Georgia were the same as those found in recently collected Megacopta samples from Japan. The implications of these data are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Candidatus Ishikawaella capsulate; Megacopta cribraria; Wolbachia; mtDNA; nuDNA; stinkbugs; symbiosis
Year: 2011 PMID: 26467727 PMCID: PMC4553543 DOI: 10.3390/insects2030264
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Insects ISSN: 2075-4450 Impact factor: 2.769
Figure 1Map delineating area infected with the stinkbug, Megacopta cribraria as of November 2010. (a) Georgia (GA) and South Carolina (SC) with contiguous states identified: Tennessee (TN), North Carolina (NC), Florida (FL) and Alabama (AL). (b) The states GA and SC enlarged to show the counties in those states with the invasive stinkbug as of November 2010. All starred areas represent counties from which samples were analyzed. White stars represent the counties from which the stinkbug was initially identified and from which sample mitochondrial genomes were sequenced.