
Genetic structure of two Plusiinae species suggests recent expansion of Chrysodeixis includens in the American continent
- Author
- Clerison R. Perini, Veronica I. Sosa, Vicente E. Koda, Horacio Silva, Andres A. Risso, Wanessa N. F. Vasconcelos, Carolina F. Goncalves, Gustavo A. Ugalde, Dayanna N. Machado, Caroline B. Bevilacqua, Daniel M. P. Ardisson-Araujo, Kevin Maebe (UGent) , Guy Smagghe (UGent) , Ivair Valmorbida and Jerson C. Guedes
- Organization
- Abstract
- The Plusiinae subfamily has many polyphagous species, many of which occur in South America. Chrysodeixis includens and Rachiplusia nu are two representatives that mainly occurs in soybeans, cotton, common beans, sunflower and alfalfa. A population genetic study of C. includens and R. nu collected in the Southern Cone of America was performed using a partial COI gene sequencing data and compared with specimens from other American countries. Six haplotypes were identified in C. includens populations of Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay, organized within a star-like haplotype network, with the most common haplotype identified as Chin_MC. R. nu populations are more diverse and stable in comparison to C. includens. Populations from Argentina and Uruguay had the highest haplotype diversity, sharing five haplotypes and putatively indicating haplotype exchange. Demographic change analysis suggested a recent population expansion of C. includens over the American continent. Some C. includens haplotypes were country-specific, suggesting population expansion in the countries where specimens were collected.
- Keywords
- RACHIPLUSIA-NU GUENEE, GRANDE-DO-SUL, LEPIDOPTERA-NOCTUIDAE, ANTICARSIA-GEMMATALIS, POPULATION-GROWTH, DIVERSITY, BACULOVIRUSES, NEUTRALITY, LOOPERS, CABBAGE, Caterpillar, Chrysodeixis includens, mtDNA, Plusiinae, Rachiplusia nu, soybean pest
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Citation
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication: http://hdl.handle.net/1854/LU-8688532
- MLA
- Perini, Clerison R., et al. “Genetic Structure of Two Plusiinae Species Suggests Recent Expansion of Chrysodeixis Includens in the American Continent.” AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, vol. 23, no. 3, 2021, pp. 250–60, doi:10.1111/afe.12427.
- APA
- Perini, C. R., Sosa, V. I., Koda, V. E., Silva, H., Risso, A. A., Vasconcelos, W. N. F., … Guedes, J. C. (2021). Genetic structure of two Plusiinae species suggests recent expansion of Chrysodeixis includens in the American continent. AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, 23(3), 250–260. https://doi.org/10.1111/afe.12427
- Chicago author-date
- Perini, Clerison R., Veronica I. Sosa, Vicente E. Koda, Horacio Silva, Andres A. Risso, Wanessa N. F. Vasconcelos, Carolina F. Goncalves, et al. 2021. “Genetic Structure of Two Plusiinae Species Suggests Recent Expansion of Chrysodeixis Includens in the American Continent.” AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY 23 (3): 250–60. https://doi.org/10.1111/afe.12427.
- Chicago author-date (all authors)
- Perini, Clerison R., Veronica I. Sosa, Vicente E. Koda, Horacio Silva, Andres A. Risso, Wanessa N. F. Vasconcelos, Carolina F. Goncalves, Gustavo A. Ugalde, Dayanna N. Machado, Caroline B. Bevilacqua, Daniel M. P. Ardisson-Araujo, Kevin Maebe, Guy Smagghe, Ivair Valmorbida, and Jerson C. Guedes. 2021. “Genetic Structure of Two Plusiinae Species Suggests Recent Expansion of Chrysodeixis Includens in the American Continent.” AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY 23 (3): 250–260. doi:10.1111/afe.12427.
- Vancouver
- 1.Perini CR, Sosa VI, Koda VE, Silva H, Risso AA, Vasconcelos WNF, et al. Genetic structure of two Plusiinae species suggests recent expansion of Chrysodeixis includens in the American continent. AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY. 2021;23(3):250–60.
- IEEE
- [1]C. R. Perini et al., “Genetic structure of two Plusiinae species suggests recent expansion of Chrysodeixis includens in the American continent,” AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY, vol. 23, no. 3, pp. 250–260, 2021.
@article{8688532, abstract = {{The Plusiinae subfamily has many polyphagous species, many of which occur in South America. Chrysodeixis includens and Rachiplusia nu are two representatives that mainly occurs in soybeans, cotton, common beans, sunflower and alfalfa. A population genetic study of C. includens and R. nu collected in the Southern Cone of America was performed using a partial COI gene sequencing data and compared with specimens from other American countries. Six haplotypes were identified in C. includens populations of Brazil, Argentina, Paraguay and Uruguay, organized within a star-like haplotype network, with the most common haplotype identified as Chin_MC. R. nu populations are more diverse and stable in comparison to C. includens. Populations from Argentina and Uruguay had the highest haplotype diversity, sharing five haplotypes and putatively indicating haplotype exchange. Demographic change analysis suggested a recent population expansion of C. includens over the American continent. Some C. includens haplotypes were country-specific, suggesting population expansion in the countries where specimens were collected.}}, author = {{Perini, Clerison R. and Sosa, Veronica I. and Koda, Vicente E. and Silva, Horacio and Risso, Andres A. and Vasconcelos, Wanessa N. F. and Goncalves, Carolina F. and Ugalde, Gustavo A. and Machado, Dayanna N. and Bevilacqua, Caroline B. and Ardisson-Araujo, Daniel M. P. and Maebe, Kevin and Smagghe, Guy and Valmorbida, Ivair and Guedes, Jerson C.}}, issn = {{1461-9555}}, journal = {{AGRICULTURAL AND FOREST ENTOMOLOGY}}, keywords = {{RACHIPLUSIA-NU GUENEE,GRANDE-DO-SUL,LEPIDOPTERA-NOCTUIDAE,ANTICARSIA-GEMMATALIS,POPULATION-GROWTH,DIVERSITY,BACULOVIRUSES,NEUTRALITY,LOOPERS,CABBAGE,Caterpillar,Chrysodeixis includens,mtDNA,Plusiinae,Rachiplusia nu,soybean pest}}, language = {{eng}}, number = {{3}}, pages = {{250--260}}, title = {{Genetic structure of two Plusiinae species suggests recent expansion of Chrysodeixis includens in the American continent}}, url = {{http://doi.org/10.1111/afe.12427}}, volume = {{23}}, year = {{2021}}, }
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