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Global Patterns in Insects and Fungi of Dormant Twigs of Native and Exotic Congeneric Tree Species

Authors :
Franić, Iva
Prospero, Simone
Adamson, Kalev
Allan, Eric
Attorre, Fabio
Auger-Rozenberg, Marie-Anne
Augustin, Sylvie
Avtzis, Dimitrios
Baert, Wim
Barta, Marek
Bauters, Kenneth
Bellahirech, Amani
Boroń, Piotr
Bragança, Helena
Brestovanská, Tereza
Brurberg, May Bente
Burgess, Treena
Burokienė, Daiva
Černý, Karel
Cleary, Michelle
Corley, Juan
Coyle, David R
Csóka, György
Davydenko, Kateryna
Elsafy, Mohammed Ahmed Omer
Eötvös, Csaba
de Groot, Maarten
Diez, Julio Javier
Doğmuş Lehtijärvi, Hatice Tuğba
Drenkhan, Rein
Fan, Jian-ting
Grad, Bartłomiej
Hartmann, Martin
Havrdova, Ludmila
Hrabetova, Marketa
Justesen, Mathias Just
Kacprzyk, Magdalena
Kenis, Marc
Kirichenko, Natalia
Kramarets, Volodymyr
Lacković, Nikola
Lazarević, Jelena
Leskiv, Marianna
Li, Hongmei
Madsen, Malumphy, Chris
Corrie Lynne
Matošević, Dinka
Matsiakh, Iryna
Meffert, Johan
Migliorini, Duccio
Mikó, Ágnes
Nikolov, Christo
O’Hanlon, Richard
Oskay, Funda
Paap, Trudy
Parpan, Taras
Petrakis, Panos V
Piškur, Barbara
Ravn, Hans Peter
Ronse, Anne
Roques, Alain
Sivickis, Karolis
Talgø, Venche
Tomoshevich, Maria
Uimari, Anne
Ulyshen, Michael
Vettraino, Anna Maria
Villari, Caterina
Wang, Yongjun
Witzell, Johanna
Zlatković, Milica
Eschen, René
Eschen, Rene
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Live plants are often traded in winter or early spring when the number of pests is potentially low, in part because deciduous trees lack foliage. However, the pests that may be associated with traded dormant plant material are likely to be largely unknown. Pest risk assessments can only be performed for known pest species and it is therefore important to identify potential pests before they are moved to a new area. In addition, it is difficult to predict whether introduced pests, even if already well known, may shift host after their arrival. Several studies attempted to estimate the likelihood of host shifts using literature about known pest-host associations, but the number of pests in these studies was often limited and the data were unlikely collected in the same place and at the same time. To overcome these problems, we performed a global study which aimed at detecting potential insect pests and fungal pathogens on congeneric native and exotic woody plant species that belong to six studied tree genera. Sampling was done simultaneously in 33 countries around the world following a common sampling protocol. At each location, twenty 50 cm long, dormant twigs were collected from each tree species and kept in containers with water at room temperature. Emerged insects were collected and identified based on morphology and DNA barcoding of the mDNA COI region. Fungal DNA was extracted from pooled buds, twig parts and needles for species identification using a metabarcoding approach based on the rDNA ITS region. Here, we present preliminary results of this study and discuss them in the context of pest risk assessment.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.57a035e5b1ae..97f79fc1e377e1de99008ec8e65f418d