“…The infection, distribution of Wolbachia and its ability to manipulate the reproductive properties of arthropod hosts have attracted much interest concerning its role in the host’s biology, ecology, and evolution, as well as in the development of novel, symbiont based and environmentally friendly based methods for pest and disease management ( Bourtzis and Miller, 2006 ; Hedges et al., 2008 ; Moreira et al., 2009 ; Laidoudi et al., 2020 ; Ilinsky et al., 2022 ; Zong et al., 2022 ). For instance, recent studies have shown that, the presence of Wolbachia in some insect species may provide antiviral protection, and inhibit the infection and transmission of certain pathogens such as Dengue, Zika, Chikungunya, Yellow fever, Mayaro viruses and rice ragged stunt virus (RRSV) ( Moreira et al., 2009 ; Walker et al., 2011 ; Van den Hurk et al., 2012 ; Frentiu et al., 2014 ; Tan et al., 2017 ; Ryan et al., 2019 ).…”