Anagyrus tanystis De Santis, 1964
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.1653/024.101.0320 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/66452675-FF89-B806-FCEC-9512FCAFF803 |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Anagyrus tanystis De Santis, 1964 |
status |
|
Anagyrus tanystis De Santis, 1964 View in CoL
( Figs. 37–41 View Figs )
Anagyrus tanystis De Santis 1964: 61−63 View in CoL . Type locality: Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, Argentina.
Anagyrus tanystis De Santis View in CoL : Triapitsyn et al. 2014b: 221 (key).
Type Material Examined. Holotype female [ MACN] on slide ( Fig. 37 View Figs ) labeled: 1. “CAPITAL FEDERAL Col: A. Zotta I-II/1913”; 2. [partially printed in red] “ Anagyrus tanystis Det. De Santis HOLOTIPO MUSEO DE LA PLATA ”; 3. [ MACN type number] “A 89”.
Distribution. Autonomous City of Buenos Aires, Argentina ( De Santis 1964).
Hosts. Unknown.
Comments. The holotype female of A. tanystis is dissected under 1 large square coverslip ( Fig. 37 View Figs ); it lacks almost the entire flagellum of 1 of the antennae except for about a half of F1. Illustrated here, to facilitate its recognition, are its features ( Figs. 38–41 View Figs ). This species is known only from a single specimen, which was not examined by Triapitsyn et al. (2014b) during preparation of the key to the described species of Anagyrus in Argentina.
GENETIC ANALYSIS
DNA sequences of all 3 loci (28S, ITS2 and COI) were successfully obtained for 29 of 30 specimens. The only “shortfall” was the COI of a single specimen ( PR17-254 ) from Argentina,which failed to amplify de- spite multiple attempts. Direct-sequencing of the COI locus also failed for a second specimen from Argentina (PR 17-256) and 3 from Brazil (PR 17-247 through 249) due to co-amplification of a NUMT (GenBank accessions MG748829-832 ). However, a valid COI sequence was obtained for each of these specimens by amplicon cloning .
ML analyses of the concatenated 28S (MG731466-495) and COI (MG731496-524) sequences recovered 3 distinct clades ( Fig. 42 View Fig ).These 3 clades corresponded to the species Leptomastidea hypogeococci , Anagyrus cachamai , and Anagyrus quilmes . Although discarded for the purpose of phylogenetic inference, sequences of ITS2 (MG731525- 554) identified the same 3 clades.
Leptomastidea hypogeococci – DNA sequences of the rRNA loci 28S and ITS2 were identical across specimens from Puerto Rico, Argentina, and Brazil, with the slight exception that the 28S sequence of 3 specimens (PR 17-253 and PR 17-257 from Puerto Rico, and PR17-254 from Argentina) harbored a heterozygous peak at position 140 (G or A, rather than just a G). The Puerto Rican specimens shared an identical COI haplotype, but on average this differed from the COI of Brazilian and Argentinian specimens (obtained from cloned amplicons) by 3.7% (average pairwise p-distance = 0.037). Variation in COI among Brazilian and Argentinian specimens was 10-fold lower (average p-distance = 0.003) .
Anagyrus cachamai – DNA sequences of 28S were more or less identical across specimens from Argentina and Paraguay, with just a separate single base insertion at positon 447 and 451 in specimens PR17-246 ( Paraguay) and PR17-252 ( Argentina), respectively. ITS2 was more variable, with 26 single nucleotide substitutions, insertions or deletions across 5 specimens and 695 aligned bases. In addition, 2 specimens (PR14-212 and PR14-213; MG731548-548 ) differed from the other 3 ( MG731534-536 ) with a 29bp deletion (positions 148-176). These 2 specimens also shared a COI haplotype ( MG731518-519 ) that differed from that of the other 3 specimens ( MG731504-506 ) by over 5% (average pairwise p-distance = 0.054). Variation among the latter 3 specimens was 4-fold lower (average p-distance = 0.013) .
Anagyrus quilmes – DNA sequences of 28S and ITS2 were identical across all specimens from Puerto Rico, Argentina, Brazil, and Paraguay. Eight COI haplotypes were detected, and there was a strong phylogeographic signal in the distribution of these haplotypes ( Fig. 43 View Fig ). Pairwise divergence between 7 of these haplotypes was typically low (average pairwise p-distance = 0.005), but the remaining haplotype, harbored by PR14-214, differed from all others by over 5% (average pairwise p-distance = 0.054).
BIOLOGICAL CONTROL OF THE HARRISIA CACTUS MEALYBUG IN PUERTO RICO
The biological control program for Harrisia cactus mealybug in Puerto Rico was advanced with 2 shipments of 2 parasitoid species from South America to the quarantine facility at the University of Puerto Rico Center for Excellence in Quarantine & Invasive Species. The species transported to the quarantine facility were A. cachamai and A. lapachosus . Both parasitoid species accepted the Puerto Rico Harrisia cactus mealybug,and host range tests were initiated. Quarantine host range tests are expected to be completed by spring 2018, and a request for field release should be submitted before summer 2018. In addition, studies on natural enemy population dynamics and parasitoid biological parameters are planned for the 2 quarantined parasitoid colonies from South America, and a newly described parasitoid species already established and attacking the Harrisia cactus mealybug in Puerto Rico. This project is poised to successfully de- velop the only method that challenges the Harrisia cactus mealybug pest before we experience the devastation of cactus biodiversity in Puerto Rico.
MACN |
Museo Argentino de Ciencias Naturales Bernardino Rivadavia |
No known copyright restrictions apply. See Agosti, D., Egloff, W., 2009. Taxonomic information exchange and copyright: the Plazi approach. BMC Research Notes 2009, 2:53 for further explanation.
Kingdom |
|
Phylum |
|
Class |
|
Order |
|
Family |
|
Genus |
Anagyrus tanystis De Santis, 1964
Triapitsyn, Serguei V., Aguirre, María B., Logarzo, Guillermo A., Hight, Stephen D., Ciomperlik, Matthew A., Rugman-Jones, Paul F. & Verle Rodrigues, Jose C. 2018 |
Anagyrus tanystis
Triapitsyn SV & Logarzo GA & Aguirre MB & Aquino DA 2014: 221 |
Anagyrus tanystis
De Santis L. 1964: 63 |