Publications by authors named "Elisabeth Fung"

Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) is a biocontrol strategy that has been widely utilized to suppress or eradicate outbreak populations of insect pests such as tephritid fruit flies. As SIT is highly favored due to it being species-specific and environmentally friendly, there are constant efforts to improve the efficiency and efficacy of this method in particular at low pest densities; one of which is the use of genetically enhanced strains. Development of these desirable strains has been facilitated by the emergence of the CRISPR/Cas genome-editing technology that enables the rapid and precise genomic modification of non-model organisms.

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Mass releases of sterilized male insects, in the frame of sterile insect technique programs, have helped suppress insect pest populations since the 1950s. In the major horticultural pests Bactrocera dorsalis, Ceratitis capitata, and Zeugodacus cucurbitae, a key phenotype white pupae (wp) has been used for decades to selectively remove females before releases, yet the gene responsible remained unknown. Here, we use classical and modern genetic approaches to identify and functionally characterize causal wp mutations in these distantly related fruit fly species.

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Background: Pest eradication using the Sterile Insect Technique (SIT) involves high-density releases of sterilized males that mate with wild females and ultimately suppress the population. Sterilized females are not required for SIT and their removal or separation from males prior to release remains challenging. In order to develop genetic sexing strains (GSS), conditional traits such as temperature sensitive lethality are required.

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Bee pollination is critical for improving productivity of one third of all plants or plant products consumed by humans. The health of honey bees is in decline in many countries worldwide, and RNA viruses together with other biological, environmental and anthropogenic factors have been identified as the main causes. The rapid genetic variation of viruses represents a challenge for diagnosis.

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