The Asian citrus psyllid, Diaphorina citri Kuwayama, a vector of citrus huanglongbing, is now present in all citrus-producing states in the USA and Mexico. In addition to citrus, the insect can reproduce on several other plant species in the Rutaceae family; orange jasmine (Murraya spp.) and curry leaf (Bergera koenigii) are among its preferred hosts. There are several indigenous Rutaceae species in North America, and some are popular ornamentals. A study was therefore initiated to determine the suitability of some of these plants for feeding and development of the psyllid in choice and no-choice experiments. D. citri was found to reproduce successfully on Choisya ternata, C. arizonica and Helietta parvifolia in no-choice tests, but preferentially selected orange jasmine and curry leaf for feeding and reproduction, in choice tests. On Amyris madrensis, A. texana and Zanthoxylum fagara, adult psyllids laid eggs which hatched, but no successful nymphal development was recorded beyond the first instars. No oviposition was recorded on Esenbeckia berlandieri, Ptelea trifoliata and Casimiroa tetrameria, although adult psyllids were able to survive on these species for several days. Results showed that C. ternata, C. arizonica and H. parvifolia can serve host plants of D. citri and this constitutes the first report of these plants serving as host for D. citri. The findings of the present study suggest that native rutaceous host plants can serve as host plants and thus affect D. citri population dynamics and the epidemiology of Huanglongbing, the deadly citrus greening disease whose pathogen is vectored by D. citri. Thus, area-wide management of this pest also should target these riparian habitats where these host plants are present with D. citri biological control agents for sustainable management of this pest.
Analysis of the genetic structure of the red spiny lobster (Panulirus interruptus) population was conducted along the Baja California Peninsula, Mexico. Samples for allozyme analysis came from Ensenada, Punta Eugenia, Punta Abreojos, San Juanico, and Bahia Magdalena (about 50 individuals each). Of 16 loci analysed, five were polymorphic (95% criterion) in at least one subpopulation. A significant mean value of FIS = 0.125 indicated some subpopulations departed from Hardy-Weinberg expectations; increased homozygosity was particularly evident for alleles EST-2*b and LAP*a at Ensenada and EST-2*c and EST-4*c at San Juanico. MeanFST = 0.101, which included 99% criterion polymorphic loci, was significant (P < 0.05), supporting a genetic structure throughout the species’ geographical range. Pairwise heterogeneity and FST tests showed no significant differences in allele frequencies between Punta Eugenia and Punta Abreojos, but several pairwise comparisons among the other locations, especially at the most variable loci, showed significant differences, supporting a hypothesis of genetic differentiation of P. interruptus into three subpopulations: southern, central, and northern Baja California. Oceanographic processes, such as semipermanent eddies south of Punta Eugenia that tend to retain phyllosoma larvae, may help generate this pattern. The implications of these findings for the management of the resource are also considered.
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