Molecular characterization of Cardinium, Rickettsia, Spiroplasma and Wolbachia in mite species from citrus orchards
Tetranychidae spider mites are considered key citrus pests in some production areas, especially Tetranychus urticae Koch. Over the past decades, pesticide overuse seems to have promoted T. urticae population selection in citrus orchards. However, the microbiota has also been pointed out as a plausib...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Experimental & applied acarology 2020-07, Vol.81 (3), p.335-355 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Tetranychidae spider mites are considered key citrus pests in some production areas, especially
Tetranychus urticae
Koch. Over the past decades, pesticide overuse seems to have promoted
T. urticae
population selection in citrus orchards. However, the microbiota has also been pointed out as a plausible explanation for population structure or plant host specialisation observed in several arthropod species. In this work, we have determined the incidence of
Cardinium
,
Rickettsia
,
Spiroplasma
and
Wolbachia
as representatives of major distorter bacteria genera in
Aplonobia histricina
(Berlese),
Eutetranychus banksi
(McGregor),
Eutetranychus orientalis
(Klein),
Panonychus citri
(McGregor),
Tetranychus evansi
Baker and Pritchard,
Tetranychus turkestani
Ugarov and Nikolskii, and
T. urticae
populations from Spanish citrus orchards. Only
Wolbachia
was detected by PCR. The multilocus alignment approach and phylogenetic inference indicated that all detected
Wolbachia
belong to supergroup B. The deep analysis of each 16S rDNA,
ftsZ
and
wsp
gene sequences allowed identifying several phylogenetically different
Wolbachia
sequences. It probably indicates the presence of several different races or strains, all of them belonging to supergroup B. The
wsp
sequence typing analysis unveiled the presence of the two already identified alleles (61 and 370) and allowed to contribute with five new alleles, supporting the presence of different but related B-races in the studied mite populations. The results are discussed and related to
T. urticae
population structure, previously observed in Spanish citrus orchards. |
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ISSN: | 0168-8162 1572-9702 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s10493-020-00508-z |