1. Multiple incursion pathways for Helicoverpa armigera in Brazil show its genetic diversity spreading in a connected world
- Author
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Jerson Vanderlei Carús Guedes, Karl H.J. Gordon, Wee Tek Tay, Tom Walsh, Stephen H. Roxburgh, Jonas Andre Arnemann, and Guy Smagghe
- Subjects
0106 biological sciences ,0301 basic medicine ,HELIOTHIS ,FLOW ,Biosecurity ,1ST REPORT ,lcsh:Medicine ,01 natural sciences ,Gene flow ,lcsh:Science ,Phylogeny ,Multidisciplinary ,HUBNER LEPIDOPTERA ,biology ,BEMISIA-TABACI ,Ecology ,Lepidoptera ,Geography ,Brazil ,Metabolic Networks and Pathways ,Agricultural genetics ,Bolivia ,Old World ,Argentina ,Helicoverpa armigera ,Spatial distribution ,DNA, Mitochondrial ,Article ,LEPIDOPTERA-NOCTUIDAE ,Electron Transport Complex IV ,BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS ,03 medical and health sciences ,Phylogenetics ,parasitic diseases ,Animals ,Humans ,POPULATION-STRUCTURE ,Genetic diversity ,IDENTIFICATION ,Invasive species ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,fungi ,Biology and Life Sciences ,PEST ,Genetic Variation ,biology.organism_classification ,010602 entomology ,030104 developmental biology ,Haplotypes ,Agriculture ,Earth and Environmental Sciences ,Uruguay ,lcsh:Q ,PEST analysis ,business - Abstract
The Old World cotton bollworm Helicoverpa armigera was first detected in Brazil with subsequent reports from Paraguay, Argentina, Bolivia, and Uruguay. This pattern suggests that the H. armigera spread across the South American continent following incursions into northern/central Brazil, however, this hypothesis has not been tested. Here we compare northern and central Brazilian H. armigera mtDNA COI haplotypes with those from southern Brazil, Uruguay, Argentina, and Paraguay. We infer spatial genetic and gene flow patterns of this dispersive pest in the agricultural landscape of South America. We show that the spatial distribution of H. armigera mtDNA haplotypes and its inferred gene flow patterns in the southwestern region of South America exhibited signatures inconsistent with a single incursion hypothesis. Simulations on spatial distribution patterns show that the detection of rare and/or the absence of dominant mtDNA haplotypes in southern H. armigera populations are inconsistent with genetic signatures observed in northern and central Brazil. Incursions of H. armigera into the New World are therefore likely to have involved independent events in northern/central Brazil, and southern Brazil/Uruguay-Argentina-Paraguay. This study demonstrates the significant biosecurity challenges facing the South American continent, and highlights alternate pathways for introductions of alien species into the New World.
- Published
- 2019
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