Spontaneous vegetation of Thripidae (Thysanoptera) vectors of Tospovirus in the La Plata horticultural belt

The tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) is a Bunyaviridae that causes different symptoms to plants, even death. In Argentina, there are 4 thrips species reported as vectors of Tospovirus: Frankliniella occidentalis, Frankliniella schultzei, Frankliniella gemina and Thrips tabaci. The spontaneous vegeta...

Descripción completa

Guardado en:
Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Carrizo, P.I., Amela García, M.T.
Formato: JOUR
Acceso en línea:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03258718_v43_n1_p78_Carrizo
Aporte de:
id todo:paper_03258718_v43_n1_p78_Carrizo
record_format dspace
spelling todo:paper_03258718_v43_n1_p78_Carrizo2023-10-03T15:24:27Z Spontaneous vegetation of Thripidae (Thysanoptera) vectors of Tospovirus in the La Plata horticultural belt Carrizo, P.I. Amela García, M.T. The tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) is a Bunyaviridae that causes different symptoms to plants, even death. In Argentina, there are 4 thrips species reported as vectors of Tospovirus: Frankliniella occidentalis, Frankliniella schultzei, Frankliniella gemina and Thrips tabaci. The spontaneous vegetation growing within uncontrolled weedy areas near greenhouse peppers were identified as true reproductive hosts of thrips vectors, by means of adult and larval identification. Three sites were studied within the horticultural belt, a strip of 40 km around La Plata City (34°54' lat. S, 57°55' long. O), Argentina. During 2000-2003, monthly surveys were performed in the areas of the greenhouses were weed control does not take place, extracting flowers from the spontaneous vegetation. Through 60 sampling dates, 14,636 flowers of spontaneous vegetation were collected, and 54,050 Thysanoptera individuals were obtained, 40,356 were adults (96.96[%] Thripidae vs. 3.04[%] Phlaeothripidae) and 13,694 were larvae of 1st and 2nd stage (94.1[%] Thripidae and 5.9[%] Aeolothripidae and Phlaeothripidae). The four species seem to have very similar requirements, due the overlap respect to their feeding and breeding hosts. The botanical family was not related to the presence of thrips vectors, neither in adult or larval stage. Out of 40 surveyed weed species, 19 resulted non-host (NoH), 21 feeding host (HA), and the remnant 19, reproductive hosts (HR), (18 in wide sense and 11 in strict sense) for one, two, three or four species of thrips. Fil:Amela García, M.T. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales; Argentina. JOUR info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.5/ar http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03258718_v43_n1_p78_Carrizo
institution Universidad de Buenos Aires
institution_str I-28
repository_str R-134
collection Biblioteca Digital - Facultad de Ciencias Exactas y Naturales (UBA)
description The tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) is a Bunyaviridae that causes different symptoms to plants, even death. In Argentina, there are 4 thrips species reported as vectors of Tospovirus: Frankliniella occidentalis, Frankliniella schultzei, Frankliniella gemina and Thrips tabaci. The spontaneous vegetation growing within uncontrolled weedy areas near greenhouse peppers were identified as true reproductive hosts of thrips vectors, by means of adult and larval identification. Three sites were studied within the horticultural belt, a strip of 40 km around La Plata City (34°54' lat. S, 57°55' long. O), Argentina. During 2000-2003, monthly surveys were performed in the areas of the greenhouses were weed control does not take place, extracting flowers from the spontaneous vegetation. Through 60 sampling dates, 14,636 flowers of spontaneous vegetation were collected, and 54,050 Thysanoptera individuals were obtained, 40,356 were adults (96.96[%] Thripidae vs. 3.04[%] Phlaeothripidae) and 13,694 were larvae of 1st and 2nd stage (94.1[%] Thripidae and 5.9[%] Aeolothripidae and Phlaeothripidae). The four species seem to have very similar requirements, due the overlap respect to their feeding and breeding hosts. The botanical family was not related to the presence of thrips vectors, neither in adult or larval stage. Out of 40 surveyed weed species, 19 resulted non-host (NoH), 21 feeding host (HA), and the remnant 19, reproductive hosts (HR), (18 in wide sense and 11 in strict sense) for one, two, three or four species of thrips.
format JOUR
author Carrizo, P.I.
Amela García, M.T.
spellingShingle Carrizo, P.I.
Amela García, M.T.
Spontaneous vegetation of Thripidae (Thysanoptera) vectors of Tospovirus in the La Plata horticultural belt
author_facet Carrizo, P.I.
Amela García, M.T.
author_sort Carrizo, P.I.
title Spontaneous vegetation of Thripidae (Thysanoptera) vectors of Tospovirus in the La Plata horticultural belt
title_short Spontaneous vegetation of Thripidae (Thysanoptera) vectors of Tospovirus in the La Plata horticultural belt
title_full Spontaneous vegetation of Thripidae (Thysanoptera) vectors of Tospovirus in the La Plata horticultural belt
title_fullStr Spontaneous vegetation of Thripidae (Thysanoptera) vectors of Tospovirus in the La Plata horticultural belt
title_full_unstemmed Spontaneous vegetation of Thripidae (Thysanoptera) vectors of Tospovirus in the La Plata horticultural belt
title_sort spontaneous vegetation of thripidae (thysanoptera) vectors of tospovirus in the la plata horticultural belt
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12110/paper_03258718_v43_n1_p78_Carrizo
work_keys_str_mv AT carrizopi spontaneousvegetationofthripidaethysanopteravectorsoftospovirusinthelaplatahorticulturalbelt
AT amelagarciamt spontaneousvegetationofthripidaethysanopteravectorsoftospovirusinthelaplatahorticulturalbelt
_version_ 1782030569468592128