Evidence for a cryptic parasitoid species reveals its suitability as a biological control agent.
Authors
Seehausen, Martin LukasRis, Nicolas
Driss, Laetitia
Racca, Alessandro
GIROD, Pierre
Warot, Sylvie
Borowiec, Nicolas
Tosevski, Ivo
Kenis, Marc
Article (Published version)
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Uncertainty about the taxonomic status and the specificity of a species commonly prevent its consideration as a candidate for biological control of pest organisms. Here we use a combination of molecular analysis and crossing experiments to gather evidence that the parasitoid wasp Ganaspis brasiliensis, a candidate for biological control of the invasive spotted wing drosophila Drosophila suzukii, is a complex of at least two cryptic species. Complementary experiments demonstrate that individuals from one genetic group readily parasitize several drosophila species regardless of their food source while individuals from the other one are almost exclusively specific to larvae feeding in ripening fruits. Because only D. suzukii attacks ripening fruits in its area of invasion, parasitoids from this second group appear to be well suited as a biological control agent. Our study demonstrates the need for a combination of biosystematics with biological and ecological investigations for the develo...pment of safe and efficient biological control programs.
Source:
Scientific Reports, 2020, 10Publisher:
- Nature publishing
Funding / projects:
- European Union’s Seventh Framework Program for Research, Technological Development and Demonstration under grant agreement no. 613678 (DROPSA)
- Horizon 2020 Program for Research & Innovation under grant agreement no. 771271 (HOMED)
- Loterie Romande, the Swiss Federal Office for the Environment, and the Swiss Federal Office for Agriculture through the Drosophila suzukii Task Force
- Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 200010 (Institute for Plant Protection and Environment, Belgrade) (RS-200010)
DOI: 10.1038/s41598-020-76180-5
ISSN: 2045-2322
PubMed: 33154398
WoS: 000587665600008
Scopus: 000587665600008
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IZBISTY - JOUR AU - Seehausen, Martin Lukas AU - Ris, Nicolas AU - Driss, Laetitia AU - Racca, Alessandro AU - GIROD, Pierre AU - Warot, Sylvie AU - Borowiec, Nicolas AU - Tosevski, Ivo AU - Kenis, Marc PY - 2020 UR - https://plantarum.izbis.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/724 AB - Uncertainty about the taxonomic status and the specificity of a species commonly prevent its consideration as a candidate for biological control of pest organisms. Here we use a combination of molecular analysis and crossing experiments to gather evidence that the parasitoid wasp Ganaspis brasiliensis, a candidate for biological control of the invasive spotted wing drosophila Drosophila suzukii, is a complex of at least two cryptic species. Complementary experiments demonstrate that individuals from one genetic group readily parasitize several drosophila species regardless of their food source while individuals from the other one are almost exclusively specific to larvae feeding in ripening fruits. Because only D. suzukii attacks ripening fruits in its area of invasion, parasitoids from this second group appear to be well suited as a biological control agent. Our study demonstrates the need for a combination of biosystematics with biological and ecological investigations for the development of safe and efficient biological control programs. PB - Nature publishing T2 - Scientific Reports T1 - Evidence for a cryptic parasitoid species reveals its suitability as a biological control agent. VL - 10 DO - 10.1038/s41598-020-76180-5 ER -
@article{ author = "Seehausen, Martin Lukas and Ris, Nicolas and Driss, Laetitia and Racca, Alessandro and GIROD, Pierre and Warot, Sylvie and Borowiec, Nicolas and Tosevski, Ivo and Kenis, Marc", year = "2020", abstract = "Uncertainty about the taxonomic status and the specificity of a species commonly prevent its consideration as a candidate for biological control of pest organisms. Here we use a combination of molecular analysis and crossing experiments to gather evidence that the parasitoid wasp Ganaspis brasiliensis, a candidate for biological control of the invasive spotted wing drosophila Drosophila suzukii, is a complex of at least two cryptic species. Complementary experiments demonstrate that individuals from one genetic group readily parasitize several drosophila species regardless of their food source while individuals from the other one are almost exclusively specific to larvae feeding in ripening fruits. Because only D. suzukii attacks ripening fruits in its area of invasion, parasitoids from this second group appear to be well suited as a biological control agent. Our study demonstrates the need for a combination of biosystematics with biological and ecological investigations for the development of safe and efficient biological control programs.", publisher = "Nature publishing", journal = "Scientific Reports", title = "Evidence for a cryptic parasitoid species reveals its suitability as a biological control agent.", volume = "10", doi = "10.1038/s41598-020-76180-5" }
Seehausen, M. L., Ris, N., Driss, L., Racca, A., GIROD, P., Warot, S., Borowiec, N., Tosevski, I.,& Kenis, M.. (2020). Evidence for a cryptic parasitoid species reveals its suitability as a biological control agent.. in Scientific Reports Nature publishing., 10. https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-76180-5
Seehausen ML, Ris N, Driss L, Racca A, GIROD P, Warot S, Borowiec N, Tosevski I, Kenis M. Evidence for a cryptic parasitoid species reveals its suitability as a biological control agent.. in Scientific Reports. 2020;10. doi:10.1038/s41598-020-76180-5 .
Seehausen, Martin Lukas, Ris, Nicolas, Driss, Laetitia, Racca, Alessandro, GIROD, Pierre, Warot, Sylvie, Borowiec, Nicolas, Tosevski, Ivo, Kenis, Marc, "Evidence for a cryptic parasitoid species reveals its suitability as a biological control agent." in Scientific Reports, 10 (2020), https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-020-76180-5 . .