| Literature DB >> 29565996 |
Kent M Daane1, Mathew C Middleton1, René F H Sforza2, Nicholas Kamps-Hughes1, Gillian W Watson3, Rodrigo P P Almeida1, Margarita C G Correa4, Doug A Downie5, Vaughn M Walton6.
Abstract
Determining the most likely source of an invasive pest species might help to improve their management by establishing efficient quarantine measures and heading the search of efficient biological control agents. Planococcus ficus is an invasive mealybug pest of vineyards in Argentina, California, Mexico, Peru and South Africa. This mealybug pest had a previously known geographic distribution spanning southern Europe, the Middle East, and parts of northern Africa. In North America, Pl. ficus was first discovered in the early 1990s and soon thereafter in Mexico. To determine the origin of invasive populations in North America, Pl. ficus from California and Mexico were compared with material throughout its presumptive native range in the Mediterranean region, as well as material collected from an older invasion in South Africa and recently invaded Argentina. From each sample location, genomic DNA was sequenced for the nuclear internal transcribed spacer one (ITS1) and the mitochondrial cytochrome c. oxidase one (CO1). Phylogenetic analyses of CO1, ITS1 and concatenated CO1 and ITS1 data-sets using Bayesian and neighbor-joining analysis support two major divisions: a European grouping (Europe, Tunisia, Turkey) and a Middle Eastern grouping (Israel and Egypt). The invasive populations in Argentina and South Africa align with the European group and the invasive populations in North America align with the Middle Eastern group, with one Israel sample aligning closely with the North American clade, suggesting that Israel was the origin of those populations.Entities:
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Year: 2018 PMID: 29565996 PMCID: PMC5863958 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0193852
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
DNA sequence variation.
| CO1/ ITS1 | Country where the mealybug population was sampled | ||||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Argentina | Egypt | France | Greece | Israel | Italy | Mexico | Portugal | So. Africa | Spain | Tunisia | Turkey | USA | |
| 0/1.3 | |||||||||||||
| 23/4.0 | 0/0.667 | ||||||||||||
| 3.4/1.3 | 25.2/2.6 | 1.9/0.0 | |||||||||||
| 8.0/2.3 | 25.6/1.6 | 9.0/1.0 | 6.6/0.0 | ||||||||||
| 21.5/2.5 | 6.5/3.6 | 23.8/3.0 | 24.2/2.0 | 4/2.6 | |||||||||
| 6.3/2.3 | 26.1/1.6 | 6.3/1.0 | 6.7/0.0 | 24.7/2.0 | 4.5/0.0 | ||||||||
| 24.0/3.2 | 9.0/3.0 | 26.6/2.3 | 26.4/1.3 | 7.0/2.2 | 27.4/1.3 | 0/1.3 | |||||||
| 2.2/2.3 | 24.7/2.6 | 1.8/1.0 | 7.7/0.5 | 23.2/2.5 | 5.1/0.5 | 25.7/1.8 | 0.8/2.0 | ||||||
| 3.5/1.3 | 26.5/2.6 | 2.9/0.0 | 8.7/1.0 | 25.0/3.0 | 6.5/1.0 | 27.5/2.3 | 1.9/1.0 | 1.0/0.0 | |||||
| 2.3/1.8 | 24.5/2.6 | 2.2/0.5 | 8.0/1.0 | 23.0/3.0 | 5.6/1.0 | 25.5/2.3 | 1.1/0.7 | 2.3/0.5 | 1.4/1.0 | ||||
| 8.3/1.6 | 26.8/3.6 | 9.5/3.0 | 6.1/2.0 | 25.4/1.3 | 6.2/2.0 | 27.8/2.6 | 8.3/3.0 | 9.8/3.0 | 8.6/3.0 | 3.1/0.0 | |||
| 7.2/2.3 | 25.7/1.6 | 9.2/1.0 | 7.4/0.0 | 24.9/2.0 | 6.8/0.0 | 27.0/1.3 | 7.9/0.5 | 9.3/1.0 | 8.1/1.0 | 7.5/2.0 | 3.6/0.0 | ||
| 24.1/3.0 | 9.1/3.6 | 26.7/3.0 | 26.5/2.0 | 7.1/2.0 | 27.5/2.0 | .125/2.0 | 25.8/2.5 | 27.6/3.0 | 25.6/3.0 | 27.9/2.0 | 27.1/2.0 | 0.2/2.0 | |
DNA sequence variation in 706 bp of the CO1 and 497 bp of the ITS1 gene regions from Planococcus ficus (Hem.: Pseudococcidae) sampled populations; for each row and column, the average number of pairwise difference, within (diagonal element) and between 13 population groups (below diagonal) is shown, with the CO1 / ITS1 gene regions on the left and right, respectively.
Fig 1(A) Consensus trees for populations of Planococcus ficus (and the out-group Pl. citri) derived from Bayesian analysis, with the numbers at nodes showing posterior probabilities, using (A) a concatenated CO1 and ITS1 data set, (B) the COI data set, and (C) the ITS1 data set; the insect populations were collected in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Argentina, California and Mexico and presented grouped by the nearest city and the isolate tested (codes are in Supplemental Table 1).
Fig 2Neighbor-joining network of CO1 data.
Haplotype network for the CO1 region for populations of Planococcus ficus collected in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Argentina, California and Mexico. Each circle represents a different haplotype and the sizes of circles correspond to the number of individuals sharing this haplotype. Colors indicate sampling country. The crossbeam on the connecting lines between haplotypes represents a substitution. Black dots symbolize hypothetic haplotypes not sampled in the data set.
Fig 3Geographical distribution of the CO1 haplotypes for populations of Planococcus ficus collected in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Argentina, California and Mexico.