2009
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0811097106
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Invasive Japanese beetles facilitate aggregation and injury by a native scarab pest of ripening fruits

Abstract: Invasive species' facilitation, or benefiting, of native species is rarely considered in biological invasion literature but could have serious economic consequences should a non-native herbivore facilitate injury by a native pest of high-value crops. Japanese beetle (JB), Popillia japonica, a polyphagous scarab, facilitates feeding by the obligate fruit-feeding native green June beetle (GJB), Cotinis nitida, by biting into intact grape berries that GJB, which has blunt spatulate mandibles, is otherwise unable … Show more

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Cited by 38 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…Genus Meyerozyma is a reclassification of the genus Pichia; therefore, until recently, these microorganisms were classified as Pichia guilliermondii and Pichia caribbica. These results agree with those of other studies where M. caribbica and other species associated with the M. guilliermondii phylogenetic group were isolated from the gut of members of the order Coleoptera (Rao et al, 2007;Hammons et al, 2009;Rivera et al, 2009). Some studies have also reported the isolation of M. caribbica from other sources, such as the digestive tract of Aedes aegypti (Gusmão et al, 2007) and fermented beverages (Papalexandratou and Vuyst, 2011;Hidalgo et al, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…Genus Meyerozyma is a reclassification of the genus Pichia; therefore, until recently, these microorganisms were classified as Pichia guilliermondii and Pichia caribbica. These results agree with those of other studies where M. caribbica and other species associated with the M. guilliermondii phylogenetic group were isolated from the gut of members of the order Coleoptera (Rao et al, 2007;Hammons et al, 2009;Rivera et al, 2009). Some studies have also reported the isolation of M. caribbica from other sources, such as the digestive tract of Aedes aegypti (Gusmão et al, 2007) and fermented beverages (Papalexandratou and Vuyst, 2011;Hidalgo et al, 2012).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 92%
“…S6). Intriguingly, these species also are the yeasts associated with beetles, many of which are attracted to fermentation byproducts (20). Only three genes are found uniquely in these xylose-fermenting species, one of which contains an α-glucuronidase domain and a signal peptide sequence indicative of secretion (SI Appendix, Fig.…”
Section: Conservation Of Orthologous Gene Groups Points To Xylose Utimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The exploitation of herbivore-induced plant volatiles by insect predators and parasitoids, for example, is widespread and well documented [2,8,9]. Induced plant volatiles are also known to guide foraging and oviposition by insect herbivores [10], in some cases serving as aggregation cues [11] but in others eliciting aversive responses that probably reflect reduced host plant quality resulting from the presence of competitors and prior induction of plant defences [12,13].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%