The genetic characterization of fall armyworm populations in Ecuador and its implications to migration and pest management in the northern regions of South America.

The fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda) is a moth pest native to the Western Hemisphere that has recently become a global problem, invading Africa, Asia, and Australia. The species has a broad host range, long-distance migration capability, and a propensity for the generation of pesticide resistan...

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Main Authors: Rodney N Nagoshi, Ernesto Cañarte, Bernardo Navarrete, Jimmy Pico, Catalina Bravo, Myriam Arias de López, Sandra Garcés-Carrera
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2020-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236759
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spelling doaj-227a580b92c248258e1e336dc483e1bf2021-03-03T21:59:07ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032020-01-01158e023675910.1371/journal.pone.0236759The genetic characterization of fall armyworm populations in Ecuador and its implications to migration and pest management in the northern regions of South America.Rodney N NagoshiErnesto CañarteBernardo NavarreteJimmy PicoCatalina BravoMyriam Arias de LópezSandra Garcés-CarreraThe fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda) is a moth pest native to the Western Hemisphere that has recently become a global problem, invading Africa, Asia, and Australia. The species has a broad host range, long-distance migration capability, and a propensity for the generation of pesticide resistance traits that make it a formidable invasive threat and a difficult pest to control. While fall armyworm migration has been extensively studied in North America, where annual migrations of thousands of kilometers are the norm, migration patterns in South America are less understood. As a first step to address this issue we have been genetically characterizing fall armyworm populations in Ecuador, a country in the northern portion of South America that has not been extensively surveyed for this pest. These studies confirm and extend past findings indicating similarities in the fall armyworm populations from Ecuador, Trinidad-Tobago, Peru, and Bolivia that suggest substantial migratory interactions. Specifically, we found that populations throughout Ecuador are genetically homogeneous, indicating that the Andes mountain range is not a long-term barrier to fall armyworm migration. Quantification of genetic variation in an intron sequence describe patterns of similarity between fall armyworm from different locations in South America with implications for how migration might be occurring. In addition, we unexpectedly found these observations only apply to one subset of fall armyworm (the C-strain), as the other group (R-strain) was not present in Ecuador. The results suggest differences in migration behavior between fall armyworm groups in South America that appear to be related to differences in host plant preferences.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236759
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rodney N Nagoshi
Ernesto Cañarte
Bernardo Navarrete
Jimmy Pico
Catalina Bravo
Myriam Arias de López
Sandra Garcés-Carrera
spellingShingle Rodney N Nagoshi
Ernesto Cañarte
Bernardo Navarrete
Jimmy Pico
Catalina Bravo
Myriam Arias de López
Sandra Garcés-Carrera
The genetic characterization of fall armyworm populations in Ecuador and its implications to migration and pest management in the northern regions of South America.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Rodney N Nagoshi
Ernesto Cañarte
Bernardo Navarrete
Jimmy Pico
Catalina Bravo
Myriam Arias de López
Sandra Garcés-Carrera
author_sort Rodney N Nagoshi
title The genetic characterization of fall armyworm populations in Ecuador and its implications to migration and pest management in the northern regions of South America.
title_short The genetic characterization of fall armyworm populations in Ecuador and its implications to migration and pest management in the northern regions of South America.
title_full The genetic characterization of fall armyworm populations in Ecuador and its implications to migration and pest management in the northern regions of South America.
title_fullStr The genetic characterization of fall armyworm populations in Ecuador and its implications to migration and pest management in the northern regions of South America.
title_full_unstemmed The genetic characterization of fall armyworm populations in Ecuador and its implications to migration and pest management in the northern regions of South America.
title_sort genetic characterization of fall armyworm populations in ecuador and its implications to migration and pest management in the northern regions of south america.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2020-01-01
description The fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda) is a moth pest native to the Western Hemisphere that has recently become a global problem, invading Africa, Asia, and Australia. The species has a broad host range, long-distance migration capability, and a propensity for the generation of pesticide resistance traits that make it a formidable invasive threat and a difficult pest to control. While fall armyworm migration has been extensively studied in North America, where annual migrations of thousands of kilometers are the norm, migration patterns in South America are less understood. As a first step to address this issue we have been genetically characterizing fall armyworm populations in Ecuador, a country in the northern portion of South America that has not been extensively surveyed for this pest. These studies confirm and extend past findings indicating similarities in the fall armyworm populations from Ecuador, Trinidad-Tobago, Peru, and Bolivia that suggest substantial migratory interactions. Specifically, we found that populations throughout Ecuador are genetically homogeneous, indicating that the Andes mountain range is not a long-term barrier to fall armyworm migration. Quantification of genetic variation in an intron sequence describe patterns of similarity between fall armyworm from different locations in South America with implications for how migration might be occurring. In addition, we unexpectedly found these observations only apply to one subset of fall armyworm (the C-strain), as the other group (R-strain) was not present in Ecuador. The results suggest differences in migration behavior between fall armyworm groups in South America that appear to be related to differences in host plant preferences.
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0236759
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