“…They can affect the sexual reproduction of lepidopteran hosts, such as cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI) in Hypolimnas bolina and Polygonia calbum (Hornett et al., 2006 ; Kodandaramaiah et al., 2013 ), male killing (MK) in Acraea encedon and Ostrinia moths (Dyson et al., 2002 ; Fukui et al., 2015 ), feminization induction (FI) in Eurema hecabe (Kageyama et al., 2008 ) and parthenogenesis in Tuta absoluta (Erasmus et al., 2022 ). The Wolbachia can also affect various life‐history traits and impact on lepidopteran host biology, such as effects on longevity of Talicada nyseus (Ankola et al., 2013 ), fecundity of Ectropis grisescens (Zhang et al., 2021 ) and resistance to insecticides in Chilo suppressalis (Lei et al., 2020 ). Additionally, Wolbachia may cause mitochondrial introgression between sibling species or a selective sweep through a population, and drive a mito‐nuclear discordance between the host mitochondrial and nuclear phylogenies (Jiang et al., 2018 ; Narita et al., 2006 ; Toews & Brelsford, 2012 ; Zhu et al., 2023 ).…”