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Analysis of host preference and geographical distribution of Anastrepha suspensa (Diptera: Tephritidae) using phylogenetic analyses of mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I DNA sequence data

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 March 2007

L.M. Boykin
Affiliation:
US Horticultural Research Laboratory, Subtropical Insects Unit, 2001 South Rock Road, Fort Pierce, Florida 34945, USA
R.G. Shatters Jr*
Affiliation:
US Horticultural Research Laboratory, Subtropical Insects Unit, 2001 South Rock Road, Fort Pierce, Florida 34945, USA
D.G. Hall
Affiliation:
US Horticultural Research Laboratory, Subtropical Insects Unit, 2001 South Rock Road, Fort Pierce, Florida 34945, USA
R.E. Burns
Affiliation:
Division of Plant Industry, Florida Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services, 3513 South US 1, Fort Pierce, Florida 34982, USA
R.A. Franqui
Affiliation:
Botanical Garden South, 1193 Guyacan Street, San Juan, Puerto Rico 00926-1118
*
*Fax: 001 772 462 5986 E-mail: [email protected]

Abstract

Anastrepha suspensa (Loew) is an economically important pest, restricted to the Greater Antilles and southern Florida. It infests a wide variety of hosts and is of quarantine importance in citrus, a multi-million dollar industry in Florida. The observed recent increase in citrus infested with A. suspensa in Florida has raised questions regarding host-specificity of certain populations and genetic diversity of the pest throughout its geographical distribution. Cytochrome oxidase I (COI) DNA sequence data was used to characterize the genetic diversity of A. suspensa from Florida and Caribbean populations reared from different host plants. Maximum likelihood and Bayesian phylogenetic methods were used to analyse COI data. Sequence variation among mitochondrial COI genes from 107 A. suspensa samples collected throughout Florida and the Caribbean ranged between 0 and 10% and placed all A. suspensa as a monophyletic group that united all A. suspensa in a clade sister to a Central American group of the A. fraterculus paraphyletic species complex. The most likely tree of the COI locus indicated that COI sequence variation was too low to provide resolution at the subspecies level, therefore monophyletic groups based on host-plant use, geography (Florida, Jamaica, Cayman Islands, Puerto Rico or Dominican Republic) or population sampled are not supported. This result indicates that either no population segregation has occurred based on these biological or geographical distinctions and that this is a generalist, polyphagous invasive genotype. Alternatively, if populations are distinct, the segregation event was more recent than can be distinguished based on COI sequence variation.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2006

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