Widespread establishment of adventive populations of Leptopilina japonica (Hymenoptera, Figitidae) in North America and development of a multiplex PCR assay to identify key parasitoids of Drosophila suzukii (Diptera, Drosophilidae)

Tara D. Gariepy,Paul K. Abram, Chris Adams,Dylan Beal,Elizabeth Beers, Jonathan Beetle,David Biddinger, Gabrielle Brind’Amour, Allison Bruin,Matthew Buffington,Hannah Burrack,Kent M. Daane, Kathleen Demchak, Phillip Fanning, Alexandra Gillett,Kelly Hamby, Kim Hoelmer,Brian Hogg,Rufus Isaacs, Ben Johnson,Jana C. Lee, Hannah K. Levensen, Greg Loeb, Angela Lovero,Joshua M. Milnes, Kyoo R. Park, Patricia Prade, Karly Regan,Justin M. Renkema,Cesar Rodriguez-Saona,Subin Neupane, Cera Jones,Ashfaq Sial, Peter Smythman, Amanda Stout,Steven Van Timmeren,Vaughn M. Walton,Julianna K. Wilson,Xingeng Wang

NeoBiota(2024)

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摘要
In recent years, there has been an increase in the adventive establishment and spread of parasitoid wasps outside of their native range. However, lack of taxonomic tools can hinder the efficient screening of field-collected samples to document the establishment and range expansion of parasitoids on continent-wide geographic scales. Here we report that Leptopilina japonica (Hymenoptera, Figitidae), a parasitoid of the globally invasive fruit pest Drosophila suzukii (Diptera, Drosophilidae), is now widespread in much of North America despite not having been intentionally introduced. Surveys in 2022 using a variety of methods detected L. japonica in 10 of 11 surveyed USA States and one Canadian Province where it was not previously known to occur. In most surveys, L. japonica was the most common species of D. suzukii parasitoid found. The surveys also resulted in the detection of Ganaspis cf. brasiliensis (Hymenoptera, Figitidae), the recently-released biological control agent of D. suzukii, in six USA States where it had not previously been found. These new detections are likely a result of intentional biological control introductions rather than spread of adventive populations. A species-specific multiplex PCR assay was developed as a rapid, accurate and cost-effective method to distinguish L. japonica, G. cf. brasiliensis, the closely-related cosmopolitan parasitoid Leptopilina heterotoma (Hymenoptera, Figitidae) and other native parasitoid species. This dataset and the associated molecular tools will facilitate future studies of the spread and ecological impacts of these introduced parasitoids on multiple continents.
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