Authors
Julian R Dupuis, Raul Ruiz‐Arce, Norman B Barr, Donald B Thomas, Scott M Geib
Publication date
2019/9
Journal
Evolutionary Applications
Volume
12
Issue
8
Pages
1641-1660
Description
Recurrently invading pests provide unique challenges for pest management, but also present opportunities to utilize genomics to understand invasion dynamics and inform regulatory management through pathway analysis. In the southern United States, the Mexican fruit fly Anastrepha ludens is such a pest, and its incursions into Texas and California represent major threats to the agricultural systems of those regions. We developed a draft genome assembly for A. ludens, conducted range‐wide population genomics using restriction site‐associated DNA sequencing, and then developed and demonstrated a panel of highly differentiated diagnostic SNPs for source determination of intercepted flies in this system. Using 2,081 genomewide SNPs, we identified four populations across the range of A. ludens, corresponding to western Mexico, eastern Mexico/Texas, Guatemala/Belize/Honduras, and Costa Rica/Panama …
Total citations
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