Publications by authors named "Tyler J Raszick"

The boll weevil, Anthonomus grandis grandis Boheman, and thurberia weevil, Anthonomus grandis thurberiae Pierce, together comprise a species complex that ranges throughout Mexico, the southwestern regions of the United States and parts of South America. The boll weevil is a historically damaging and contemporaneously threatening pest to commercial upland cotton, Gossypium hirsutum L. (Malvales: Malvaceae), whereas the thurberia weevil is regarded as an innocuous non-pest subspecies that is mostly found on non-cultivated Thurber's or Arizona cotton, Gossypium thurberi L.

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Rapid and accurate identification of subspecies is crucial for effective management and eradication. Current diagnostic methods have limitations in terms of time to diagnosis (up to seven days) and can yield ambiguous results. Here, we present the validation of a custom TaqMan SNP Genotyping Assay for the rapid and accurate identification of (boll weevil) and (thurberia weevil) subspecies.

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The boll weevil (Anthonomus grandis Boheman) reproduces on a reported 13 species of wild host plants in North America, two in the United States and 12 in Mexico. The distributions of these plants are of economic importance to pest management and provide insight into the evolutionary history and origin of the BW. However, detailed information regarding the distributions of many of these species is lacking.

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Speciation is the process through which reproductive isolation develops between distinct populations. Because this process takes time, speciation studies often necessarily examine populations within a species that are at various stages of divergence. The fall armyworm, (J.

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The boll weevil, Boheman (Coleoptera: Curculionidae), is an important pest of commercial cotton across the Americas. In the United States, eradication of this species is complicated by re-infestations of areas where eradication has been previously successful and by the existence of morphologically similar variants that can confound identification efforts. To date, no study has applied a high-throughput sequencing approach to better understand the population genetic structure of the boll weevil.

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Background: The stable fly, Stomoxys calcitrans, is a major blood-feeding pest of livestock that has near worldwide distribution, causing an annual cost of over $2 billion for control and product loss in the USA alone. Control of these flies has been limited to increased sanitary management practices and insecticide application for suppressing larval stages. Few genetic and molecular resources are available to help in developing novel methods for controlling stable flies.

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Article Synopsis
  • - The cotton fleahopper, Pseudatomoscelis seriatus, is a pest that harms upland cotton by attacking pre-floral buds, leading to yield losses, and has a specific seasonal pattern in host usage in Texas.
  • - Researchers analyzed genetic differences between populations of the pest that infest cotton versus those that feed on other plants using advanced DNA sequencing techniques, revealing high gene flow among the different populations.
  • - The study concluded that woolly croton serves as a natural refuge for the cotton fleahopper, facilitating gene flow between cotton-infesting and alternative host-infesting genotypes, which is important for managing insect resistance.
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