1962
DOI: 10.1002/jobm.3630020305
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Untersuchungen über die Symbiose von Tieren mit Pilzen und Bakterien. IX. Über die Beziehungen zwischen Symbionten und Wirtsorganismus bei Pseudococcus citri, Ps. maritimus und Orthezia insignis

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Cited by 13 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Absence of DNA indicates that the bacteria were digested or excreted by the host. This reflects a previous study, in which long‐term heat stress at 39 °C physically damaged the symbiont system (Köhler & Schwartz, ). This may suggest that the heat is associated with cell death, or perhaps triggers an internal molecular mechanism or molecular cascade in P. citri which caused a host response to eradicate the symbiotic bacteria.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Absence of DNA indicates that the bacteria were digested or excreted by the host. This reflects a previous study, in which long‐term heat stress at 39 °C physically damaged the symbiont system (Köhler & Schwartz, ). This may suggest that the heat is associated with cell death, or perhaps triggers an internal molecular mechanism or molecular cascade in P. citri which caused a host response to eradicate the symbiotic bacteria.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 89%
“…Other species of mealybug show similar life‐history patterns, with fecundity, longevity, and adult weight peaking at species‐specific optimum temperatures in Maconellicoccus hirsutus (Green) (Patil et al., ), Pseudococcus citriculus (Green) and P. kraunhiae (Arai, ), Paracoccus marginatus Williams & Granara de Willink (Amarasekare et al., ), and Pseudococcus longispinus (Targioni Tozzeti) (Santa‐Cecília et al., ). Long‐term exposure of juvenile and adult P. citri to 39 °C led to dismantling of the mycetocytes, ultimately leading to the death of the hosts (Köhler & Schwartz, ). This demonstrates temperature as a limiting factor in mealybug growth and reproduction, and as an influential factor in sex determination.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The infection dynamics plausibly reflects important biological roles of the primary ␤-endosymbionts for the nutritional and reproductive physiology of the host mealybugs. It was reported that ingestion of antibiotics by mealybugs or exposure to high temperatures resulted in degeneration of the endosymbiotic system within a few days, and the insects died soon after (23). The host-symbiont cocladogenesis over evolutionary time (2,12) also favors the idea that the primary ␤-endosymbionts are essential for the host mealybugs.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The biological roles of the ␤-and ␥-endosymbionts for the host insect are almost untouched, except for an early work describing that antibiotic and high-temperature treatments of mealybugs resulted in degeneration of the endosymbiotic system and mortality of the insects (23). Nutritional, physiological, and ecological interactions between the ␤-endosymbiont, the ␥-endosymbiont, and the host insect are totally unknown.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The only relevant study is a report which showed that injection of penicillin into the circulating sap of host plants had a lethal effect on P. citri and P. maritimus, suggesting that some bacterial associates may be essential for these pseudococcids (27). Since intracellular symbiotic bacteria harbored in well-developed mycetomes have been commonly found in the pseudococcids examined so far (6,41), the endosymbionts may play some essential physiological and nutritional roles in the hosts, as has been demonstrated in aphids, planthoppers, and other insects (5,(11)(12)(13)36).…”
Section: Vol 66 2000mentioning
confidence: 99%