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Title: A molecular phylogeny of the genus Lygodium (Schizaeaceae) with special reference to the biological control and host range testing of Lygodium microphyllum.
Authors: Madeira, P.T.
Pemberton, R.W.
Center, T.D.
USDA, ARS
Source: Biological control : theory and application in pest management. 2008 June, v. 45, issue 3, p. 308-318.
NALT Subjects: Lygodium
Lygodium microphyllum
chloroplast DNA
sequence analysis
molecular systematics
phylogeny
invasive species
weed control
biological control agents
phytophagous insects
phytophagous mites
host range
alternative hosts
Other Subjects: ancestral hosts
invasive ferns
Issue Date: Jun-2008
Abstract: Lygodium microphyllum, first naturalized in the 1960s, has aggressively invaded forest-dominated wetlands in southern and central Florida. The indeterminate growth of this invasive climbing fern creates thick rachis mats which climb over shrubs and trees smothering the underlying growth and carrying ground fires into the forest canopy. Foreign surveys for natural enemies identified 20 species of insects and two species of mites. Host range testing of three insect species and one mite included five Lygodium species (L. palmatum, L. volubile, L. cubense, L. venustum, and L. oligostachyum) native to the United States and the West Indies. A molecular phylogeny of the genus was conducted using the trnL intron and the trnL-F intergenic spacer of chloroplast DNA to determine the relationship of L. microphyllum to other Lygodium species. Three major clades appeared, one with L. palmatum and L. articulatum (the most basal), a second with L. reticulatum and L. microphyllum, and a third comprising the other species examined. Lygodium microphyllum appeared at the end of a long branch approximately equidistant from all species of interest preventing the correlation of genetic distance and host range behavior. However, inspection of the results of host range experiments showed a relationship between the presence of a related biotype or species of the insect on a related alternate host and the ability of that insect to develop on that alternate host. Ancestral host usage and ecological fitting are examined as possible explanations for the acceptance of L. palmatum by the tested musotimine insects.
URI: http://hdl.handle.net/10113/17096
Appears in Collections:USDA Research and Information

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