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Genetic structure of European and Mediterranean maize borer populations on several wild and cultivated host plants
Authors:Laurianne Leniaud  Philippe Audiot  Denis Bourguet  Brigitte Frérot  Gilles Genestier  Siu Fai Lee  Thibaut Malausa  Anne-Hélène Le Pallec  Marie-Claude Souqual  & Sergine Ponsard
Institution:Laboratoire Dynamique de la Biodiversité, UMR CNRS 5172, UniversitéP. Sabatier –Toulouse III, 118 route de Narbonne, 31 062 Toulouse, France,;Centre de Biologie et de Gestion des Populations (CBGP), UMR INRA-IRD-CIRAD-Agro.M, Campus International de Baillarguet, CS 30 016, 34 988 Montferrier/Lez, France,;Laboratoire Communication Chimique, UMR PISC 1272, Institut National de la Recherche Agronomique Versailles, Route de Saint-Cyr, 78 026 Versailles Cedex, France,;Centre for Environmental Stress and Adaptation Research (CESAR), Genetics Department, University of Melbourne, Australia
Abstract:Target pests may become resistant to Bacillus thuringiensis (Bt) toxins produced by trangenic maize (Zea mays L.). Untreated refuge areas are set aside to conserve high frequencies of susceptibility alleles: a delay in resistance evolution is expected if susceptible individuals from refuges mate randomly with resistant individuals from Bt fields. In principle, refuges can be toxin‐free maize or any other plant, provided it hosts sufficiently large pest populations mating randomly with populations from Bt‐maize fields. Our aim was to examine the suitability of several cultivated or weedy plants pepper (Capsicum frutescens L.), sorghum (Sorghum spec.), sunflower (Helianthus annuus L.), cocklebur (Xanthium spec.), cantaloupe (Cucumis melo L.), and hop (Humulus lupulus L.)] as refuges for Ostrinia nubilalis (Hübner) (Lepidoptera: Crambidae) and Sesamia nonagrioides Lefebvre (Lepidoptera: Noctuidae), two major maize pests in southern Europe. Larvae of both species were collected on these plants. Their genetic population structure was examined at several allozyme loci. We found little or no evidence for an influence of geographic distance, but detected a significant host‐plant effect on the genetic differentiation for both species. Ostrinia nubilalis populations from sunflower, pepper, cocklebur, and sorghum appear to belong to the same genetic entity as populations collected on maize, but to differ from populations on hop. Accordingly, females from pepper and cocklebur produced exclusively the ‘Z’ type sexual pheromone, which, in France, characterizes populations developing on maize. Qualitatively, these plants (except hop) could thus serve as refuges for O. nubilalis; however, they may be of little use quantitatively as they were found much less infested than maize. Sesamia nonagrioides populations on maize and sorghum reached comparable densities, but a slight genetic differentiation was detected between both. The degree of assortative mating between populations feeding on both hosts must therefore be assessed before sorghum can be considered as a suitable refuge for this species.
Keywords:Lepidoptera  Crambidae  Noctuidae                Ostrinia nubilalis                            Sesamia nonagrioides              transgenic insecticidal maize  host races  refuge crop  resistance evolution
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