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Geographic structure with no evidence for host-associated lineages in European populations of Lysiphlebus testaceipes, an introduced biological control agent

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2013
10.1016@j.biocontrol.2013.05.007.pdf (771.4Kb)
Authors
Mitrović, Milana
Petrović, Anđeljko
Kavallieratos, Nickolas G.
Stary, Petr
Petrović-Obradović, Olivera
Tomanović, Željko
Vorburger, Christoph
Article (Accepted Version)
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Abstract
Lysiphlebus testaceipes (Cress.) is an aphidiine parasitoid originally introduced to Europe as a biological control agent of citrus aphids in the Mediterranean. It has rapidly become widespread in coastal areas continuing gradually to expand inland. L. testaceipes exploited a large number of aphids in Europe, including new hosts and significantly changed the relative abundance of the native parasitoids. This behavior may reflect a broad oligophagy of the introduced parasitoid or it may require the evolution of host specialization that results in genetically differentiated subpopulations on different hosts. To address this issue we used the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I and seven microsatellite loci to analyze the structure of genetic variation for L. testaceipes samples collected from 12 different aphid hosts across seven European countries, as well as some samples from Benin, Costa Rica, USA, Algeria and Libya for comparison. Only five COI haplotypes with moderate diverge...nce were identified overall. There was no evidence for the association of haplotypes with different aphid hosts in the European samples, but there was geographic structuring in this variation. Haplotype diversity was highest in France, where L. testaceipes was introduced, but only a single haplotype was detected in areas of south-eastern Europe that were invaded subsequently. The analysis of microsatellite variation confirmed the lack of host-associated genetic structure, as well as differentiation between populations from south-western and southeastern Europe. The parasitoid L. testaceipes in Europe is thus an opportunistic oligophagous species with a population structure shaped by the processes of introduction and expansion rather than by host exploitation. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Keywords:
Lysiphlebus testaceipes / microsatellite / cytochrome oxidase I / biological control / parasitoids
Source:
Biological Control, 2013, 66, 3, 150-158
Publisher:
  • Academic Press Inc Elsevier Science, San Diego
Funding / projects:
  • SCOPES program of the Swiss National Science Foundation - IZ73Z0_128174
  • Agrobiodiversity and land-use change in Serbia: an integrated biodiversity assessment of key functional groups of arthropods and plant pathogens (RS-43001)
  • Academy of Sciences of the Czech Republic - AV0Z50070508

DOI: 10.1016/j.biocontrol.2013.05.007

ISSN: 1049-9644

WoS: 000321826600002

Scopus: 2-s2.0-84879578047
[ Google Scholar ]
21
19
URI
https://plantarum.izbis.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/297
https://plantarum.izbis.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/584
Collections
  • Radovi istraživača / Researchers' publications
Institution/Community
IZBIS
TY  - JOUR
AU  - Mitrović, Milana
AU  - Petrović, Anđeljko
AU  - Kavallieratos, Nickolas G.
AU  - Stary, Petr
AU  - Petrović-Obradović, Olivera
AU  - Tomanović, Željko
AU  - Vorburger, Christoph
PY  - 2013
UR  - https://plantarum.izbis.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/297
UR  - https://plantarum.izbis.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/584
AB  - Lysiphlebus testaceipes (Cress.) is an aphidiine parasitoid originally introduced to Europe as a biological control agent of citrus aphids in the Mediterranean. It has rapidly become widespread in coastal areas continuing gradually to expand inland. L. testaceipes exploited a large number of aphids in Europe, including new hosts and significantly changed the relative abundance of the native parasitoids. This behavior may reflect a broad oligophagy of the introduced parasitoid or it may require the evolution of host specialization that results in genetically differentiated subpopulations on different hosts. To address this issue we used the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I and seven microsatellite loci to analyze the structure of genetic variation for L. testaceipes samples collected from 12 different aphid hosts across seven European countries, as well as some samples from Benin, Costa Rica, USA, Algeria and Libya for comparison. Only five COI haplotypes with moderate divergence were identified overall. There was no evidence for the association of haplotypes with different aphid hosts in the European samples, but there was geographic structuring in this variation. Haplotype diversity was highest in France, where L. testaceipes was introduced, but only a single haplotype was detected in areas of south-eastern Europe that were invaded subsequently. The analysis of microsatellite variation confirmed the lack of host-associated genetic structure, as well as differentiation between populations from south-western and southeastern Europe. The parasitoid L. testaceipes in Europe is thus an opportunistic oligophagous species with a population structure shaped by the processes of introduction and expansion rather than by host exploitation. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
PB  - Academic Press Inc Elsevier Science, San Diego
T2  - Biological Control
T1  - Geographic structure with no evidence for host-associated lineages in European populations of Lysiphlebus testaceipes, an introduced biological control agent
EP  - 158
IS  - 3
SP  - 150
VL  - 66
DO  - 10.1016/j.biocontrol.2013.05.007
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Mitrović, Milana and Petrović, Anđeljko and Kavallieratos, Nickolas G. and Stary, Petr and Petrović-Obradović, Olivera and Tomanović, Željko and Vorburger, Christoph",
year = "2013",
abstract = "Lysiphlebus testaceipes (Cress.) is an aphidiine parasitoid originally introduced to Europe as a biological control agent of citrus aphids in the Mediterranean. It has rapidly become widespread in coastal areas continuing gradually to expand inland. L. testaceipes exploited a large number of aphids in Europe, including new hosts and significantly changed the relative abundance of the native parasitoids. This behavior may reflect a broad oligophagy of the introduced parasitoid or it may require the evolution of host specialization that results in genetically differentiated subpopulations on different hosts. To address this issue we used the mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase subunit I and seven microsatellite loci to analyze the structure of genetic variation for L. testaceipes samples collected from 12 different aphid hosts across seven European countries, as well as some samples from Benin, Costa Rica, USA, Algeria and Libya for comparison. Only five COI haplotypes with moderate divergence were identified overall. There was no evidence for the association of haplotypes with different aphid hosts in the European samples, but there was geographic structuring in this variation. Haplotype diversity was highest in France, where L. testaceipes was introduced, but only a single haplotype was detected in areas of south-eastern Europe that were invaded subsequently. The analysis of microsatellite variation confirmed the lack of host-associated genetic structure, as well as differentiation between populations from south-western and southeastern Europe. The parasitoid L. testaceipes in Europe is thus an opportunistic oligophagous species with a population structure shaped by the processes of introduction and expansion rather than by host exploitation. (C) 2013 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.",
publisher = "Academic Press Inc Elsevier Science, San Diego",
journal = "Biological Control",
title = "Geographic structure with no evidence for host-associated lineages in European populations of Lysiphlebus testaceipes, an introduced biological control agent",
pages = "158-150",
number = "3",
volume = "66",
doi = "10.1016/j.biocontrol.2013.05.007"
}
Mitrović, M., Petrović, A., Kavallieratos, N. G., Stary, P., Petrović-Obradović, O., Tomanović, Ž.,& Vorburger, C.. (2013). Geographic structure with no evidence for host-associated lineages in European populations of Lysiphlebus testaceipes, an introduced biological control agent. in Biological Control
Academic Press Inc Elsevier Science, San Diego., 66(3), 150-158.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocontrol.2013.05.007
Mitrović M, Petrović A, Kavallieratos NG, Stary P, Petrović-Obradović O, Tomanović Ž, Vorburger C. Geographic structure with no evidence for host-associated lineages in European populations of Lysiphlebus testaceipes, an introduced biological control agent. in Biological Control. 2013;66(3):150-158.
doi:10.1016/j.biocontrol.2013.05.007 .
Mitrović, Milana, Petrović, Anđeljko, Kavallieratos, Nickolas G., Stary, Petr, Petrović-Obradović, Olivera, Tomanović, Željko, Vorburger, Christoph, "Geographic structure with no evidence for host-associated lineages in European populations of Lysiphlebus testaceipes, an introduced biological control agent" in Biological Control, 66, no. 3 (2013):150-158,
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biocontrol.2013.05.007 . .

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