“…Gut microorganisms provide essential nutrients, digest indigestible food materials, and/or degrade phytotoxins and insecticides ( Kikuchi et al , 2012 ; Engel and Moran, 2013 ; Salem et al , 2014 ; Sudakaran et al , 2017 ; Itoh et al , 2018 ; Moran et al , 2019 ). Many species of stinkbugs in the superfamily Coreoidea (Hemiptera: Heteroptera) develop numerous crypts at the posterior part of the midgut, wherein specific Caballeronia symbionts (previously included in the genus Burkholderia ) densely proliferate - generally as a single species - until almost full occupation of the luminal space ( Kikuchi et al , 2005 , 2011a ; Olivier-Espejel et al , 2011 ; Garcia et al , 2014 ; Kuechler et al , 2016 ; Takeshita and Kikuchi, 2017 ; Ohbayashi et al , 2019b ; Acevedo et al , 2021 ; Hunter et al , 2022 ). Caballeronia gut symbionts play important roles in their hosts, such as the recycling of metabolic waste materials and providing essential amino acids and vitamins, thereby enhancing the growth and fecundity of stinkbugs ( Kikuchi et al , 2007 ; Kikuchi and Fukatsu, 2014 ; Ohbayashi et al , 2019a ).…”