2022
DOI: 10.1111/aen.12602
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Identification of two leafminer parasitoids (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae),Neochrysocharis formosaandProacriassp. from Australia, with both showing thelytoky and infection byRickettsia

Abstract: Liriomyza huidobrensis, L. sativae and L. trifolii are polyphagous agromyzid leafminers that have recently arrived in Australia, posing a threat to Australian vegetable and ornamental crops. Adventive and endemic hymenopteran parasitoids of agromyzid leafminers already present in Australia should assist in the management of these invasive agromyzid species. Neochrysocharis formosa (Hymenoptera: Eulophidae: Entedoninae) is an idiobiont endoparasitoid commonly attacking Liriomyza spp. in many countries, but it h… Show more

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Cited by 3 publications
(5 citation statements)
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“…In N. formosa, only one COI haplotype (NF_5COI.03) was found in Queensland and this is a single base pair different to N. formosa collected in Victoria (NCBI: OK076721, NF_5COI.02). Interestingly, NF_5COI.02 and another N. formosa haplotype collected at the same location, NF_5COI.01 (NCBI: OK076720), were found to be thelytokous (Xu et al, 2022). Given no males of N. formosa were collected from Queensland in this study and all specimens were infected with Rickettsia, it is possible that NF_5COI.03 is also thelytokous.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
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“…In N. formosa, only one COI haplotype (NF_5COI.03) was found in Queensland and this is a single base pair different to N. formosa collected in Victoria (NCBI: OK076721, NF_5COI.02). Interestingly, NF_5COI.02 and another N. formosa haplotype collected at the same location, NF_5COI.01 (NCBI: OK076720), were found to be thelytokous (Xu et al, 2022). Given no males of N. formosa were collected from Queensland in this study and all specimens were infected with Rickettsia, it is possible that NF_5COI.03 is also thelytokous.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 81%
“…Both N. formosa and N. okazakii were infected with the same Rickettsia sp. based on 253 bp COI sequence data, which is identical to N. formosa previously screened from Australia, Japan, and China (Xu et al, 2022). The Rickettsia sp.…”
Section: Endosymbiont Detectionsmentioning
confidence: 79%
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“…The invasion of L. sativae , L. trifolii and L. huidobrensis will see them entering ecosystems that harbour established agromyzids, such as Liriomyza brassicae (Riley), Liriomyza chenopodii (Watt), Phytomyza syngenesiae (Hardy), and Phytomyza plantaginis Goreau, as well as their parasitoid wasps, consisting of a range of eulophid wasps, such as Diglyphus isaea (Walker), Hemiptarsenus varicornis (Girault), Neochrysocharis formosa (Walker) and Zagrammosoma latilineatum Ubaidillah, as well as a range of braconid wasps ( Opius spp.) and pteromalid species such as Trigonogastrella parasitica Girault (Ridland et al 2020; Xu et al 2022). Based on overseas data, these parasitoids are expected to attack L. sativae , L. trifolii and L. huidobrensis where they co‐occur in Australia (Schuster & Wharton 1993; Zaifu et al 1999).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%