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ARS Home » Pacific West Area » Parlier, California » San Joaquin Valley Agricultural Sciences Center » Crop Diseases, Pests and Genetics Research » Research » Publications at this Location » Publication #268785

Title: Viral sequence polymorphism as a surrogate data set to assess attributes of an invasive insect population

Author
item Stenger, Drake
item Sisterson, Mark
item French, Roy

Submitted to: Entomological Society of America Annual Meeting
Publication Type: Abstract Only
Publication Acceptance Date: 6/15/2011
Publication Date: 11/3/2011
Citation: Stenger, D.C., Sisterson, M.S., French, R.C. 2011. Viral sequence polymorphism as a surrogate data set to assess attributes of an invasive insect population. Entomological Society of America Annual Meeting, in Reno, Nevada, Nov 13-16, 2011. Available: http://esa.confex.com/esa/2011/webprogram/Paper57539.html.

Interpretive Summary:

Technical Abstract: RNA virus genomes evolve at rates many-fold greater than that of multicellular organisms serving as hosts. Thus, sequence polymorphism of a virus could serve as a surrogate data set to discriminate recently separated populations of an invasive insect species. Homalodisca vitripennis reovirus (HoVRV) was used as a surrogate to assess population structure of the glassy-winged sharpshooter (Homalodisca vitripennis), an invasive species detected in California ~20 years ago. HoVRV nucleotide sequence polymorphism revealed a bottleneck in the introduced population, yielded population age estimates consistent with timing of glassy-winged sharpshooter discovery in California, and suggested gene flow among locations within the native range in the southeastern U.S. but not between native and introduced populations. Collectively, the data support use of a virus surrogate to define critical attributes of invasive species populations, with the caveats that life history of the surrogate must be closely linked to that of the host and the virus is benign such that infected individuals are not at a selective disadvantage.