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Variable resistance to spinetoram in populations of Thrips palmi across a small area unconnected to genetic similarity

The melon thrips, Thrips palmi, is an increasingly important pest of vegetables in northern China. Some populations have developed resistance in the field to the insecticide spinetoram. Understanding the origin and dispersal of insecticide‐resistant populations can shed light on resistance managemen...

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Autores principales: Shi, Pan, Guo, Shao‐Kun, Gao, Yong‐Fu, Cao, Li‐Jun, Gong, Ya‐Jun, Chen, Jin‐Cui, Yue, Lei, Li, Hu, Hoffmann, Ary Anthony, Wei, Shu‐Jun
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7513702/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33005221
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12996
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author Shi, Pan
Guo, Shao‐Kun
Gao, Yong‐Fu
Cao, Li‐Jun
Gong, Ya‐Jun
Chen, Jin‐Cui
Yue, Lei
Li, Hu
Hoffmann, Ary Anthony
Wei, Shu‐Jun
author_facet Shi, Pan
Guo, Shao‐Kun
Gao, Yong‐Fu
Cao, Li‐Jun
Gong, Ya‐Jun
Chen, Jin‐Cui
Yue, Lei
Li, Hu
Hoffmann, Ary Anthony
Wei, Shu‐Jun
author_sort Shi, Pan
collection PubMed
description The melon thrips, Thrips palmi, is an increasingly important pest of vegetables in northern China. Some populations have developed resistance in the field to the insecticide spinetoram. Understanding the origin and dispersal of insecticide‐resistant populations can shed light on resistance management strategies. In this study, we tested susceptibility of seven greenhouse populations of T. palmi to spinetoram collected from a small area of about 300 km(2) in Shandong Province and examined population genetic structure across the area based on a segment of mitochondrial cox1 gene and 22 microsatellite loci to infer the possible origin and dispersal of insecticide resistance. Levels of resistance to spinetoram differed among seven populations, which included one population with high resistance (LC(50) = 759.34 mg/L), three populations with medium resistance (LC(50) ranged from 28.69 to 34.79 mg/L), and three populations with low resistance (LC(50) ranged from 7.61 to 8.97 mg/L). The populations were genetically differentiated into two groups unrelated to both levels of resistance and geographic distance. The molecular data indicated high levels of gene flow between populations with different levels of resistance to spinetoram and low gene flow among populations with the same level of resistance, pointing to a likely separate history of resistance evolution. Resistance levels of two tested populations to spinetoram decreased 23 and 4.6 times after five generations without any exposure to the pesticide. We therefore suspect that resistance of T. palmi most likely evolved in response to local applications of the insecticide. Our study suggests that the development of resistance could be avoided or resistance even reversed by reducing usage of spinetoram.
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spelling pubmed-75137022020-09-30 Variable resistance to spinetoram in populations of Thrips palmi across a small area unconnected to genetic similarity Shi, Pan Guo, Shao‐Kun Gao, Yong‐Fu Cao, Li‐Jun Gong, Ya‐Jun Chen, Jin‐Cui Yue, Lei Li, Hu Hoffmann, Ary Anthony Wei, Shu‐Jun Evol Appl Original Articles The melon thrips, Thrips palmi, is an increasingly important pest of vegetables in northern China. Some populations have developed resistance in the field to the insecticide spinetoram. Understanding the origin and dispersal of insecticide‐resistant populations can shed light on resistance management strategies. In this study, we tested susceptibility of seven greenhouse populations of T. palmi to spinetoram collected from a small area of about 300 km(2) in Shandong Province and examined population genetic structure across the area based on a segment of mitochondrial cox1 gene and 22 microsatellite loci to infer the possible origin and dispersal of insecticide resistance. Levels of resistance to spinetoram differed among seven populations, which included one population with high resistance (LC(50) = 759.34 mg/L), three populations with medium resistance (LC(50) ranged from 28.69 to 34.79 mg/L), and three populations with low resistance (LC(50) ranged from 7.61 to 8.97 mg/L). The populations were genetically differentiated into two groups unrelated to both levels of resistance and geographic distance. The molecular data indicated high levels of gene flow between populations with different levels of resistance to spinetoram and low gene flow among populations with the same level of resistance, pointing to a likely separate history of resistance evolution. Resistance levels of two tested populations to spinetoram decreased 23 and 4.6 times after five generations without any exposure to the pesticide. We therefore suspect that resistance of T. palmi most likely evolved in response to local applications of the insecticide. Our study suggests that the development of resistance could be avoided or resistance even reversed by reducing usage of spinetoram. John Wiley and Sons Inc. 2020-05-29 /pmc/articles/PMC7513702/ /pubmed/33005221 http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12996 Text en © 2020 The Authors. Evolutionary Applications published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd This is an open access article under the terms of the http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Original Articles
Shi, Pan
Guo, Shao‐Kun
Gao, Yong‐Fu
Cao, Li‐Jun
Gong, Ya‐Jun
Chen, Jin‐Cui
Yue, Lei
Li, Hu
Hoffmann, Ary Anthony
Wei, Shu‐Jun
Variable resistance to spinetoram in populations of Thrips palmi across a small area unconnected to genetic similarity
title Variable resistance to spinetoram in populations of Thrips palmi across a small area unconnected to genetic similarity
title_full Variable resistance to spinetoram in populations of Thrips palmi across a small area unconnected to genetic similarity
title_fullStr Variable resistance to spinetoram in populations of Thrips palmi across a small area unconnected to genetic similarity
title_full_unstemmed Variable resistance to spinetoram in populations of Thrips palmi across a small area unconnected to genetic similarity
title_short Variable resistance to spinetoram in populations of Thrips palmi across a small area unconnected to genetic similarity
title_sort variable resistance to spinetoram in populations of thrips palmi across a small area unconnected to genetic similarity
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7513702/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33005221
http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/eva.12996
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