Use este identificador para citar ou linkar para este item: http://www.alice.cnptia.embrapa.br/alice/handle/doc/1158825
Título: Assessing the diversity of whiteflies infesting cassava in Brazil.
Autoria: XAVIER, C. A. D.
NOGUEIRA, A. M.
BELLO, V. H.
WATANABE, L. F. M.
BARBOSA, T. M. C.
ALVES JÚNIOR, M.
BARBOSA, L.
BESERRA-JÚNIOR, J. E. A.
BOARI, A. de J.
CALEGARIO, R.
GORAYEB, E. S.
HONORATO JÚNIOR, J.
KOCH, G.
LIMA, G. S. de A.
LOPES, C.
MELLO, R. N. de
PANTOJA, K.
SILVA, F. N.
RAMOS SOBRINHO, R.
SANTANA, E. N.
SILVA, J. W. P. da
KRAUSE-SAKATE, R.
ZERBINI, F. M.
Afiliação: CESAR A. D. XAVIER, UFV; ANGÉLICA MARIA NOGUEIRA, UFV; VINICIUS HENRIQUE BELLO, UNESP; LUÍS FERNANDO MARANHO WATANABE, UNESP; TARSIANE MARA CARNEIRO BARBOSA, UFV; MIGUEL ALVES JÚNIOR, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DO PARÁ; LEONARDO BARBOSA, INSTITUTO FEDERAL DO SUDESTE DE MINAS GERAIS; JOSÉ E. A. BESERRA-JÚNIOR, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DO PIAUÍ; ALESSANDRA DE JESUS BOARI, CPATU; RENATA CALEGARIO, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DO PARANÁ; EDUARDO SILVA GORAYEB, UNIVERSIDADE DO ESTADO DE SANTA CATARINA; JAIME HONORATO JÚNIOR, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DO OESTE DA BAHIA; GABRIEL KOCH, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DO PARANÁ; GAUS SILVESTRE DE ANDRADE LIMA, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DE ALAGOAS; CRISTIAN LOPES, INSTITUTO FEDERAL DO SUDESTE DE MINAS GERAIS; RAQUEL NEVES DE MELLO, CNPAF; KÉSSIA PANTOJA; FÁBIO NASCIMENTO SILVA, UNIVERSIDADE DO ESTADO DE SANTA CATARINA; ROBERTO RAMOS SOBRINHO, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DE ALAGOAS; ENILTON NASCIMENTO SANTANA, INSTITUTO CAPIXABA DE PESQUISA E EXTENSÃO RURAL; JOSÉ WILSON PEREIRA DA SILVA, UNIVERSIDADE FEDERAL DO PARÁ; RENATE KRAUSE-SAKATE, UNESP; FRANCISCO M. ZERBINI, UFV.
Ano de publicação: 2021
Referência: PeerJ, v. 9, e11741, July 2021.
Conteúdo: Background. The necessity of a competent vector for transmission is a primary ecological factor driving the host range expansion of plant arthropod-borne viruses, with vectors playing an essential role in disease emergence. Cassava begomoviruses severely constrain cassava production in Africa. Curiously, begomoviruses have never been reported in cassava in South America, the center of origin for this crop. It has been hypothesized that the absence of a competent vector in cassava is the reason why begomoviruses have not emerged in South America. Methods. We performed a country-wide whitefly diversity study in cassava in Brazil. Adults and/or nymphs of whiteflies were collected from sixty-six cassava fields in the main agroecological zones of the country. A total of 1,385 individuals were genotyped based on mitochondrial cytochrome oxidase I sequences. Results. A high species richness was observed, with five previously described species and two putative new ones. The prevalent species were Tetraleurodes acaciae and Bemisia tuberculata, representing over 75% of the analyzed individuals. Although we detected, for the first time, the presence of Bemisia tabaci Middle East-Asia Minor 1 (BtMEAM1) colonizing cassava in Brazil, it was not prevalent. The species composition varied across regions, with fields in the Northeast region showing a higher diversity. These results expand our knowledge of whitefly diversity in cassava and support the hypothesis that begomovirus epidemics have not occurred in cassava in Brazil due to the absence of competent vector populations. However, they indicate an ongoing adaptation process of BtMEAM1 to cassava, increasing the likelihood of begomovirus emergence in this crop
Thesagro: Mandioca
Manihot Esculenta
Vírus
Doença de Planta
NAL Thesaurus: Cassava
Plant diseases and disorders
Palavras-chave: Geminivirus
Virus vector
Digital Object Identifier: http://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11741
Tipo do material: Artigo de periódico
Acesso: openAccess
Aparece nas coleções:Artigo em periódico indexado (CPATU)

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