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Frankliniella cephalica, a New Vector for Tomato spotted wilt virus.
J. Ohnishi, H. Katsuzaki, and S. Tsuda, National Agricultural Research
Center, Tsukuba, Ibaraki 305-8666; T. Sakurai, National Agricultural Research
Center for Tohoku Region, Iwate 020-0198; Katsumi Akutsu, Ibaraki University,
Ibaraki 300-0393; and T. Murai, Utsunomiya University, Tochigi 321-8505, Japan.
Plant Dis. 90:685, 2006; published on-line as DOI: 10.1094/PD-90-0685B. Accepted
for publication 7 February 2006.
Frankliniella cephalica (Crawford) is an invasive species of thrips
found in the islands of Yaeyama in the Okinawa Prefecture, Japan. During the
late 1990s to early 2000s, a species of thrips was isolated from wild flowers of
Bidens pilosa L. and Ipomoea batatas L. growing close to
cultivated fields. They were subsequently identified as F. cephalica
using fine morphological characteristics with the help of Steve Nakahara (U.S.
Department of Agriculture, Beltsville, MD) and Laurence Mound (CSIRO,
Australia). Voucher specimens were deposited in the Laboratory of Insect
Resources, Faculty of Agriculture, Tokyo University of Agriculture by Shuji
Okajima (2). We investigated the ability of F. cephalica to vector
Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) by experimentally determining virus
transmission efficiency. Newly hatched larvae as much as 12 h old underwent a
viral acquisition-access period (AAP) of 24 h, during which they fed on the
leaves of Datura stramonium infected with TSWV-O, a Japanese type
isolate. Transmission efficiency of adults 4 days after emergence from molt (14
days after the AAP) was determined by a petunia leaf disk assay (3) in which the
adults were individually allowed to feed for successive 24-h inoculation access
periods (IAP) on two different leaf disks of Petunia × hybrida cv.
Polo Blue. Transmission of the virus by the adults was considered positive if at
least one of the leaf disks showed viral necrotic spot. We tested 20 randomly
selected leaf disks with clear necrotic spots using a simplified rapid
immunofilter paper assay. All selected disks were positive for TWSV. The
transmission efficiencies were 24.6% for female (n = 57) and 54.4% for
male (n = 125) adults. The efficiency was significantly different between
sexes (Fisher’s exact probability test, P < 0.001). We also examined
changes in the virus infection site at different developmental stages in thrips
using immunofluorescence microscopy with a polyclonal antibody to N protein of
the virus (4). After a 6-h AAP feeding by first instar larvae, the virus was
found initially to infect the epithelial cells and then spread throughout the
midgut tissue in the second instar larvae 5 days after acquisition of the virus.
In viruliferous adults, the virus was present in the salivary glands and on the
basement membrane of the midgut tissue. These data indicate that F. cephalica
is a new insect vector for TSWV. F. cephalica is a major insect pest of
tropical crops in tropical and subtropical coastal belts (1). The presence of a
thrips vector in weed hosts surrounding cultivated fields might increase the
chance of crops in this habitat becoming infected with viruses.
References: (1) M. Lamberts and J. H. Crane. Page 337 in: Advances in New
Crops. J. Janick and J. E. Simon, eds. Timber Press, Portland, OR, 1990. (2) M.
Masumoto and S. Okajima. Jpn. J. Appl. Entomol. Zool. 48:225, 2004. (3) T.
Sakurai et al. Appl. Entomol. Zool. 39:71, 2004. (4) S. Tsuda et al. Ann.
Phytopathol. Soc. Jpn. 60:216, 1994.
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