Bactrocera papayae Drew & Hancock, Bactrocera philippinensis Drew & Hancock, Bactrocera carambolae Drew & Hancock, and Bactrocera invadens Drew, Tsuruta & White are four horticultural pest tephritid fruit fly species that are highly similar, morphologically and genetically, to the destructive pest, the Oriental fruit fly, Bactrocera dorsalis (Hendel) (Diptera: Tephritidae). This similarity has rendered the discovery of reliable diagnostic characters problematic, which, in view of the economic importance of these taxa and the international trade implications, has resulted in ongoing difficulties for many areas of plant protection and food security. Consequently, a major international collaborative and integrated multidisciplinary research effort was initiated in 2009 to build upon existing literature with the specific aim of resolving biological species limits among B. papayae, B. philippinensis, B. carambolae, B. invadens and B. dorsalis to overcome constraints to pest management and international trade. Bactrocera philippinensis has recently been synonymized with B. papayae as a result of this initiative and this review corroborates that finding; however, the other names remain in use. While consistent characters have been found to reliably distinguish B. carambolae from B. dorsalis, B. invadens and B. papayae, no such characters have been found to differentiate the latter three putative species. We conclude that B. carambolae is a valid species and that the remaining taxa, B. dorsalis, B. invadens and B. papayae, represent the same species. Thus, we consider B. dorsalis (Hendel) as the senior synonym of B. papayae Drew and Hancock syn.n. and B. invadens Drew, Tsuruta & White syn.n. A redescription of B. dorsalis is provided. Given the agricultural importance of B. dorsalis, this taxonomic decision will have significant global plant biosecurity implications, affecting pest management, quarantine, international trade, postharvest treatment and basic research. Throughout the paper, we emphasize the value of independent and multidisciplinary tools in delimiting species, particularly in complicated cases involving morphologically cryptic taxa. Bactrocera (Bactrocera) dorsalis (Hendel)
The influence of climatic changes occurring since the late Miocene on Australia's eastern mesic ecosystems has received significant attention over the past 20 years. In particular, the impact of the dramatic shift from widespread rainforest habitat to a much drier landscape in which closed forest refugia were dissected by open woodland/savannah ecosystems has long been a focal point in Australian ecology and biogeography. Several specific regions along the eastern coast have been identified previously as potentially representing major biogeographical disjunctions for closed forest taxa. Initially, evidence stemmed from recognition of common zones where avian species/subspecies distributions and/or floral communities were consistently separated, but the body of work has since grown significantly with the rise of molecular phylogeographic tools and there is now a significant literature base that discusses the drivers, processes and effects of these hypothesised major biogeographical junctions (termed barriers). Here, we review the literature concerning eight major barriers argued to have influenced closed forest taxa; namely, the Laura Basin, Black Mountain Corridor, Burdekin Gap, Saint Lawrence Gap, Brisbane Valley Barrier, Hunter Valley Barrier, Southern Transition Zone and East Gippsland Barrier. We synthesise reported phylogeographical patterns and the inferred timing of influence with current climatic, vegetation and geological characteristics for each barrier to provide insights into regional evolution and seek to elicit common trends. All eight putative biogeographical barriers are characterised currently by lowland zones of drier, warmer, more open woodland and savannah habitat, with adjacent closed forest habitats isolated to upland cool, wet refugia. Molecular divergence estimates suggest two pulses of divergence, one in the early Miocene (~20–15 Mya) and a later one from the Pliocene–Pleistocene (~6–0.04 Mya). We conclude with a prospectus for future research on the eastern Australian closed forests and highlight critical issues for ongoing studies of biogeographical barriers worldwide.
BackgroundBactrocera dorsalis s.s. is a pestiferous tephritid fruit fly distributed from Pakistan to the Pacific, with the Thai/Malay peninsula its southern limit. Sister pest taxa, B. papayae and B. philippinensis, occur in the southeast Asian archipelago and the Philippines, respectively. The relationship among these species is unclear due to their high molecular and morphological similarity. This study analysed population structure of these three species within a southeast Asian biogeographical context to assess potential dispersal patterns and the validity of their current taxonomic status.ResultsGeometric morphometric results generated from 15 landmarks for wings of 169 flies revealed significant differences in wing shape between almost all sites following canonical variate analysis. For the combined data set there was a greater isolation-by-distance (IBD) effect under a ‘non-Euclidean’ scenario which used geographical distances within a biogeographical ‘Sundaland context’ (r2 = 0.772, P < 0.0001) as compared to a ‘Euclidean’ scenario for which direct geographic distances between sample sites was used (r2 = 0.217, P < 0.01). COI sequence data were obtained for 156 individuals and yielded 83 unique haplotypes with no correlation to current taxonomic designations via a minimum spanning network. beast analysis provided a root age and location of 540kya in northern Thailand, with migration of B. dorsalis s.l. into Malaysia 470kya and Sumatra 270kya. Two migration events into the Philippines are inferred. Sequence data revealed a weak but significant IBD effect under the ‘non-Euclidean’ scenario (r2 = 0.110, P < 0.05), with no historical migration evident between Taiwan and the Philippines. Results are consistent with those expected at the intra-specific level.ConclusionsBactrocera dorsalis s.s., B. papayae and B. philippinensis likely represent one species structured around the South China Sea, having migrated from northern Thailand into the southeast Asian archipelago and across into the Philippines. No migration is apparent between the Philippines and Taiwan. This information has implications for quarantine, trade and pest management.
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