2016
DOI: 10.1007/s10340-016-0752-9
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Life cycle and population genetics of bird cherry-oat aphids Rhopalosiphum padi in China: an important pest on wheat crops

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Cited by 40 publications
(45 citation statements)
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“…The adult gynoparae and virginoparae of each group were allowed to reproduce for 12 hr on T. aestivum, after which they were removed from the plants. The offspring of these gynoparae and virginoparae were identified as males, oviparae, or gynoparae according to their morphological characteristics after they had molted into their final adult form (Duan et al, 2016;Simon, Rispe, & Sunnucks, 2002). The identified males and oviparae were then randomly divided into two groups; one group (~20 aphids per rearing condition) was still reared individually to observe the life history of each aphid using the same methods described for the life tables; the other group (~30 aphids per rearing condition) was used to observe reproduction on the secondary host (T. aestivum).…”
Section: Comparison Of the Life-history Traits Of The Sexual Generamentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The adult gynoparae and virginoparae of each group were allowed to reproduce for 12 hr on T. aestivum, after which they were removed from the plants. The offspring of these gynoparae and virginoparae were identified as males, oviparae, or gynoparae according to their morphological characteristics after they had molted into their final adult form (Duan et al, 2016;Simon, Rispe, & Sunnucks, 2002). The identified males and oviparae were then randomly divided into two groups; one group (~20 aphids per rearing condition) was still reared individually to observe the life history of each aphid using the same methods described for the life tables; the other group (~30 aphids per rearing condition) was used to observe reproduction on the secondary host (T. aestivum).…”
Section: Comparison Of the Life-history Traits Of The Sexual Generamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Clones capable of cyclical parthenogenesis persist over many asexual generations during the summer on species that act as their secondary hosts (Poaceae) but form a single sexual generation on their primary host (Prunus L.) (Rispe, Bonhomme, & Simon, 1999;Simon et al, 1991). Empirical studies have identified differences in the responses of R. padi from different regions to a short photoperiod and low temperature (Delmotte, Leterme, Gauthier, Rispe, & Simon, 2002;Duan, Peng, Qiao, & Chen, 2016;Halkett, Plantegenest, Bonhomme, & Simon, 2008;Hulle, Maurice, Rispe, & Simon, 1999;Simon et al, 1996). Intraspecific variation in reproductive strategy has also been studied in other species of the family Aphididae, including Myzus persicae Sulzer (Blackman, 1974;Guillemaud, Mieuzet, & Simon, 2003;Margaritopoulos, Tsitsipis, Goudoudaki, & Blackman, 2002;Vorburger, Sunnucks, & Ward, 2003), Aphis gossypii (Fuller, Chavigny, Lapchin, & Vanlerberghe-Masutti, 1999;Razmjou, Vorburger, Moharramipour, Mirhoseini, & Fathipour, 2010;Slosser, Pinchak, & Rummel, 1989;Stoetzel, Miller, O'Brien, & Graves, 1996), Acyrthosiphon pisum (Kanbe & Akimoto, 2009), and Sitobion avenae (Dedryver, Hullé, Le Gallic, Caillaud, & Simon, 2001;Simon et al, 1999).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The R. padi holocyclic and anholocyclic lineages used in this study were collected from wheat (Triticum aestivum L., Poaceae) fields in Lanzhou city (36°05 0 N, 103°41 0 E) in June 2013 and the life cycles of the lineages were determined according to Duan et al (2017). The two lineages were reared on T. aestivum seedlings at 24°C, 70% r.h., and L16:D8 h photocycle.…”
Section: Aphidsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a holocyclic life cycle, the cyclical parthenogenesis lineages would engage in sexual reproduction once per year under inductive conditions (low temperature and short photoperiod), with generations of asexuality followed by the production of apterous viviparous females. However, for the anholocyclic life cycle, the obligate parthenogenesis lineages have continuous parthenogenesis throughout the year and do not produce sexual aphid forms under inductive conditions (Simon et al, 2002;Duan et al, 2017). Host-alternating species usually alternate between primary (usually woody) and secondary (herbaceous) host plants, and non-host-alternating species are usually monophagous but may feed on a range of related host plants (Blackman & Eastop, 1994).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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