| Literature DB >> 28713658 |
Cinthya M Villegas1, Vladimir Žikić2, Saša S Stanković2, Sebastián A Ortiz-Martínez1, Ainara Peñalver-Cruz1, Blas Lavandero1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Parasitoids are frequently used in biological control due to the fact that they are considered host specific and highly efficient at attacking their hosts. As they spend a significant part of their life cycle within their hosts, feeding habits and life history of their host can promote specialization via host-race formation (sequential radiation). The specialized host races from different hosts can vary morphologically, behaviorally and genetically. However, these variations are sometimes inconspicuous and require more powerful tools in order to detect variation such as geometric morphometrics analysis.Entities:
Keywords: Allometry; Biotypes; Geometric morphometrics; Parasitoids; Variability; Wing shape; Wing size
Year: 2017 PMID: 28713658 PMCID: PMC5508808 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.3559
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Aphidius ervi material sampled and biotype definitions.
| Aphid host | Host-plant | No of specimens | Biotype |
|---|---|---|---|
| alfalfa | 29 | ||
| pea | 28 | ||
| red clover | 14 | ||
| wheat | 10 | ||
| wheat | 10 | ||
| wheat | 13 | ||
| oat | 14 | ||
| wheat | 13 | ||
Figure 1Right forewing of Aphidius ervi; set of 13 specific landmarks.
Description of specific forewing landmarks used in the analyses. Wing vein terminology follows Wharton, Sharkey & Michael (1997).
| Landmark number | Landmark definition |
|---|---|
| 1 | Beginning of stigma |
| 2 | Corner at the middle of stigma and r vein |
| 3 | End of stigma |
| 4 | End of metacarpus |
| 5 | Projection of RS vein on the edge of wing |
| 6 | Projection of M vein on the edge of wing |
| 7 | Projection of CU vein on the edge of wing |
| 8 | Corner of RS and r-m veins |
| 9 | Corner of M and r-m veins |
| 10 | Corner of m-cu and 1CU veins |
| 11 | Corner of 1CU and 1A veins |
| 12 | Corner of 1M and 1CU |
| 13 | Beginning of parastigma |
Figure 2(A): Figure of forewing shape changes in A_pis_p biotype. The blue line represents the largest wing shape analyzed, while the gray line represents the average wing shape. (B): The regression results of the centroid size (CS) and PC scores (permutation test against the null hypothesis of independence, P-value: <0.0001).
The included biotypes were Acyrthosiphon pisum from alfalfa (A_pis_a), A. pisum from red clover (A_pis_c), A. pisum from pea (A_pis_p), Metopolophium dirhodum from wheat (M_dir_w), Rhopalosiphum padi from wheat (R_pad_w), Sitobion avenae from oat (S_ave_o) and wheat (S_ave_w) and Schizaphis graminum from wheat (S_gra_w).
Figure 3Outline-based comparison of the wing shape between the biotype A. pis_pea and the rest of the seven biotypes: Acyrthosiphon pisum wing shape from pea (A. pis_pea) was compared to A. pisum from alfalfa (A. pis_alfalfa) (A), to A. pisum from red clover (A. pis_clover) (B), to Metopolophium dirhodum from wheat (M. dir_wheat) (C), to Rhopalosiphum padi from wheat (R. pad_wheat) (D), to Sitobion avenae from oat (S. ave_oat) (E), to Sitobion avenae from wheat (S. ave_wheat) (F) and to Schizaphis graminum from wheat (S. gra_wheat) (G).
Shape differences are the results of discriminant analysis (DA). The scale factor is increased by 5. The grey outline represents the biotype A. pis_pea; the black outline represents the other biotypes compared.