Morphological, molecular and biological evidence reveal two cryptic species in Mecinus janthinus Germar (Coleoptera, Curculionidae), a successful biological control agent of Dalmatian toadflax, Linaria dalmatica (Lamiales, Plantaginaceae)
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2011
Authors
Toševski, Ivo
Caldara, Roberto
Jović, Jelena

Hernandez-Vera, Gerardo

Baviera, Cosimo
Gassmann, Andre
Emerson, Brent C.

Article (Published version)

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A combined morphological, molecular and biological study shows that the weevil species presently named Mecinus janthinus is actually composed of two different cryptic species: M. janthinus Germar, 1821 and M. janthiniformis Tosevski & Caldara sp.n. These species are morphologically distinguishable from each other by a few very subtle morphological characters. On the contrary, they are more readily distinguishable by both molecular and biological characters. A molecular assessment based on the mitochondrial DNA cytochrome oxidase subunit II gene revealed fixed differences between the two species with p-distances between samples of both species ranging from 1.3 to 2.4%. In addition to this, the larvae of the two species are found to develop on different species within the genus Linaria (Plantaginaceae): M. janthinus is associated with yellow toadflax (L. vulgaris) and M. janthiniformis with broomleaf toadflax (L. genistifolia) and Dalmatian toadflax (L. dalmatica). Molecular and host use... records further suggest the occurrence of a third species associated with L. vulgaris within M. janthinus, sampled from north Switzerland, central Hungary and east Serbia. The significance of these new findings is of particular importance because species of the M. janthinus group are used, or are potential candidates, for the biological control of invasive toadflaxes in North America.
Source:
Systematic Entomology, 2011, 36, 4, 741-753Publisher:
- Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken
Funding / projects:
- Wyoming Biological Control Steering Committee
- Ministry of Forests and Range, British Columbia Provincial Government
- USDA-APHIS-CPHST
- USDA Forest Service through the Montana State University
- California Department of Food and Agriculture
- AAFC, Lethbridge, Canada
- Colorado State University, U.S.A
- toadflax consortium in North America
- Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnologia (CONACYT) Mexico
- Agrobiodiversity and land-use change in Serbia: an integrated biodiversity assessment of key functional groups of arthropods and plant pathogens (RS-43001)
DOI: 10.1111/j.1365-3113.2011.00593.x
ISSN: 0307-6970
WoS: 000295047400010
Scopus: 2-s2.0-80052965574
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IZBISTY - JOUR AU - Toševski, Ivo AU - Caldara, Roberto AU - Jović, Jelena AU - Hernandez-Vera, Gerardo AU - Baviera, Cosimo AU - Gassmann, Andre AU - Emerson, Brent C. PY - 2011 UR - https://plantarum.izbis.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/152 AB - A combined morphological, molecular and biological study shows that the weevil species presently named Mecinus janthinus is actually composed of two different cryptic species: M. janthinus Germar, 1821 and M. janthiniformis Tosevski & Caldara sp.n. These species are morphologically distinguishable from each other by a few very subtle morphological characters. On the contrary, they are more readily distinguishable by both molecular and biological characters. A molecular assessment based on the mitochondrial DNA cytochrome oxidase subunit II gene revealed fixed differences between the two species with p-distances between samples of both species ranging from 1.3 to 2.4%. In addition to this, the larvae of the two species are found to develop on different species within the genus Linaria (Plantaginaceae): M. janthinus is associated with yellow toadflax (L. vulgaris) and M. janthiniformis with broomleaf toadflax (L. genistifolia) and Dalmatian toadflax (L. dalmatica). Molecular and host use records further suggest the occurrence of a third species associated with L. vulgaris within M. janthinus, sampled from north Switzerland, central Hungary and east Serbia. The significance of these new findings is of particular importance because species of the M. janthinus group are used, or are potential candidates, for the biological control of invasive toadflaxes in North America. PB - Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken T2 - Systematic Entomology T1 - Morphological, molecular and biological evidence reveal two cryptic species in Mecinus janthinus Germar (Coleoptera, Curculionidae), a successful biological control agent of Dalmatian toadflax, Linaria dalmatica (Lamiales, Plantaginaceae) EP - 753 IS - 4 SP - 741 VL - 36 DO - 10.1111/j.1365-3113.2011.00593.x ER -
@article{ author = "Toševski, Ivo and Caldara, Roberto and Jović, Jelena and Hernandez-Vera, Gerardo and Baviera, Cosimo and Gassmann, Andre and Emerson, Brent C.", year = "2011", abstract = "A combined morphological, molecular and biological study shows that the weevil species presently named Mecinus janthinus is actually composed of two different cryptic species: M. janthinus Germar, 1821 and M. janthiniformis Tosevski & Caldara sp.n. These species are morphologically distinguishable from each other by a few very subtle morphological characters. On the contrary, they are more readily distinguishable by both molecular and biological characters. A molecular assessment based on the mitochondrial DNA cytochrome oxidase subunit II gene revealed fixed differences between the two species with p-distances between samples of both species ranging from 1.3 to 2.4%. In addition to this, the larvae of the two species are found to develop on different species within the genus Linaria (Plantaginaceae): M. janthinus is associated with yellow toadflax (L. vulgaris) and M. janthiniformis with broomleaf toadflax (L. genistifolia) and Dalmatian toadflax (L. dalmatica). Molecular and host use records further suggest the occurrence of a third species associated with L. vulgaris within M. janthinus, sampled from north Switzerland, central Hungary and east Serbia. The significance of these new findings is of particular importance because species of the M. janthinus group are used, or are potential candidates, for the biological control of invasive toadflaxes in North America.", publisher = "Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken", journal = "Systematic Entomology", title = "Morphological, molecular and biological evidence reveal two cryptic species in Mecinus janthinus Germar (Coleoptera, Curculionidae), a successful biological control agent of Dalmatian toadflax, Linaria dalmatica (Lamiales, Plantaginaceae)", pages = "753-741", number = "4", volume = "36", doi = "10.1111/j.1365-3113.2011.00593.x" }
Toševski, I., Caldara, R., Jović, J., Hernandez-Vera, G., Baviera, C., Gassmann, A.,& Emerson, B. C.. (2011). Morphological, molecular and biological evidence reveal two cryptic species in Mecinus janthinus Germar (Coleoptera, Curculionidae), a successful biological control agent of Dalmatian toadflax, Linaria dalmatica (Lamiales, Plantaginaceae). in Systematic Entomology Wiley-Blackwell, Hoboken., 36(4), 741-753. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3113.2011.00593.x
Toševski I, Caldara R, Jović J, Hernandez-Vera G, Baviera C, Gassmann A, Emerson BC. Morphological, molecular and biological evidence reveal two cryptic species in Mecinus janthinus Germar (Coleoptera, Curculionidae), a successful biological control agent of Dalmatian toadflax, Linaria dalmatica (Lamiales, Plantaginaceae). in Systematic Entomology. 2011;36(4):741-753. doi:10.1111/j.1365-3113.2011.00593.x .
Toševski, Ivo, Caldara, Roberto, Jović, Jelena, Hernandez-Vera, Gerardo, Baviera, Cosimo, Gassmann, Andre, Emerson, Brent C., "Morphological, molecular and biological evidence reveal two cryptic species in Mecinus janthinus Germar (Coleoptera, Curculionidae), a successful biological control agent of Dalmatian toadflax, Linaria dalmatica (Lamiales, Plantaginaceae)" in Systematic Entomology, 36, no. 4 (2011):741-753, https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3113.2011.00593.x . .