AI Article Synopsis

  • Drosophila suzukii, or Spotted Wing Drosophila (SWD), poses a significant economic threat to berry and stone fruit production globally, as it can reproduce in wild fruits that surround cultivated fields.
  • Integrated Pest Management strategies suggest that biological control, particularly using parasitoids, could help manage SWD populations more effectively by targeting non-cultivated habitats.
  • Recent surveys conducted in South Korea and China identified several new parasitoid species from the genus Asobara that could potentially be used for classical biological control against SWD in areas where it has become invasive.

Article Abstract

Drosophila suzukii (Matsumura), commonly known as Spotted Wing Drosophila (SWD), is a worldwide serious economic threat to the production of berries and stone fruits. The chemical control widely used against this pest is often not able to preventing yield losses because wild flora offers an abundance of fruits to D. suzukii where the pest is able to reproduce and from where it recolonizes neighbouring cultivated fields. Alternatively, within Integrated Pest Management protocols for D. suzukii, biological control could play a key role by reducing its populations particularly in non-cultivated habitats, thus increasing the effectiveness and reducing the side negative effects of other management strategies. Because of the scarcity and of the low efficiency of autochthonous parasitoids in the new invaded territories, in the last few years, a number of surveys started in the native area of D. suzukii to find parasitoid species to be evaluated in quarantine structures and eventually released in the field, following a classical biological control approach. This paper reports the results of these surveys carried out in South Korea and for the first time in China. Among the parasitoids collected, those belonging to the genus Asobara Foerster resulted dominant both by number and species diversity. By combining morphological characters and the mitochondrial COI gene as a molecular marker, we identified seven species of Asobara, of which two associated with D. suzukii, namely A. japonica and A leveri, and five new to science, namely Asobara brevicauda, A. elongata, A mesocauda, A unicolorata, A. triangulata. Our findings offer new opportunity to find effective parasitoids to be introduced in classical biological control programmes in the territories recently invaded by D. suzukii.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4739611PMC
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0147382PLOS

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