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Highly diverse and rapidly spreading: Melanagromyza sojae threatens the soybean belt of South America

Resumen
The soybean stem fly, Melanagromyza sojae, an Asian native insect, has successfully established in Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Bolivia. These countries are among the lead global soybean producing nations, being collectively known as the soybean belt of South America. Infestation levels of M. sojae grow by the year, facilitated by the lack of efficient management strategies. Previous studies have revealed a high number of maternal lineages in M. sojae [ver mas...]
The soybean stem fly, Melanagromyza sojae, an Asian native insect, has successfully established in Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Bolivia. These countries are among the lead global soybean producing nations, being collectively known as the soybean belt of South America. Infestation levels of M. sojae grow by the year, facilitated by the lack of efficient management strategies. Previous studies have revealed a high number of maternal lineages in M. sojae populations from Southern Brazil and Paraguay, but a comprehensive survey on genetic diversity combining samples from all countries within the South American soybean belt remains absent. We used the mitochondrial DNA cytochrome oxidase I partial gene (mtCOI) to characterize specimens of M. sojae collected in fourteen Brazilian sites and one Argentine site, and then combined our mtCOI data with previously published data from Australia, Bolivia, Paraguay, and other Brazilian sites, to investigate genetic diversity in this invasive agricultural pest species. Based on the molecular characterisation of the mtCOI gene, haplotypes Msoj-COI-01 and Msoj-COI-02 have the highest frequencies in the continent. The high genetic diversity found is evidence of introductions involving multiple female founders into the continent, and the high proportion of unique mtDNA haplotypes identified from Brazil, Paraguay and Bolivia (~ 50%) suggests potential novel introductions have taken place. The findings from our study will contribute to a better understanding of M. sojae genetic diversity in South America, supporting the development of management strategies for this highly invasive pest and assisting with biosecurity preparedness of other emerging Agromyzidae flies of economic importance. [Cerrar]
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Autor
Pozebon, Henrique;   Ugalde, Gustavo Andrade;   Smagghe, Guy;   Tay, Wee Tek;   Karut, Kamil;   Copa Bazán, Angel Fernando;   Vitorio, Lucas;   Peralta, Roberto;   Saluso, Adriana;   Ramírez-Paredes, Mónica Lucía;   Murúa, María Gabriela;   Guedes, Jerson Vanderlei Carús;   Arnemann, Jonas André;  
Fuente
Biological Invasions (Published: 02 February 2021)
Fecha
2021-02
Editorial
Springer
ISSN
1387-3547
1573-1464
URI
http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12123/8834
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10530-020-02447-7
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-020-02447-7
Formato
pdf
Tipo de documento
artículo
Palabras Claves
Soja; Soybeans; Plagas de Plantas; Pests of Plants; Insecta; Melanagromyza; Glycine max; Variación Genética; Genetic Variation; América del Sur; South America; Melanagromyza sojae;
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Excepto donde se diga explicitamente, este item se publica bajo la siguiente descripción: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 2.5 Unported (CC BY-NC-SA 2.5)
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