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Assessing Potato Psyllid Haplotypes in Potato Crops in the Pacific Northwestern United States
Authors:Kylie D Swisher  Venkatesan G Sengoda  Jacob Dixon  Joseph E Munyaneza  Alexzandra F Murphy  Silvia I Rondon  Brandon Thompson  Alexander V Karasev  Erik J Wenninger  Nora Olsen  James M Crosslin
Institution:1. United States Department of Agriculture- Agricultural Research Service, 24106 North Bunn Road, Prosser, WA, 99350, USA
2. United States Department of Agriculture- Agricultural Research Service, 5230 Konnowac Pass Road, Wapato, WA, 98951, USA
3. Hermiston Agricultural Research and Extension Center: Oregon State University, 2121 South First Street, Hermiston, OR, 97838, USA
4. Department of Plant, Soil, and Entomological Sciences, University of Idaho, 875 Perimeter Drive MS 2339, Moscow, ID, 83844, USA
5. Department of Plant, Soil, and Entomological Sciences, University of Idaho, Kimberly Research and Extension Center, 3806 North 3600 East, Kimberly, ID, 83341, USA
Abstract:The potato psyllid, Bactericera cockerelli (?ulc), is a vector of the bacterium ‘Candidatus Liberibacter solanacearum’ (Lso) that has been linked to the economically devastating zebra chip disease of potato. To date, four haplotypes of the potato psyllid have been identified and include Central, Western, Northwestern, and Southwestern haplotypes. Zebra chip was reported in potato crops in the Pacific Northwestern United States for the first time in 2011, and the Lso-infected psyllids collected from zebra chip-affected fields were identified as the Western haplotype. Additional studies have reported a mix of the Western and Northwestern psyllid haplotypes in the Pacific Northwest. The present study further examined psyllid population dynamics over the duration of the 2012 potato season in the Pacific Northwest by haplotype analysis of 864 potato psyllids collected from potato fields in Washington, Oregon, and Idaho. In the Yakima Valley of Washington and the lower Columbia Basin of Washington and Oregon, the Northwestern haplotype was predominant (78 %), and was detected earlier in the season than the Western haplotype. Interestingly, in south-central Idaho, all four psyllid haplotypes were identified, but the predominant haplotype was the Western haplotype (77 %). Here, Northwestern psyllids were detected early in the season from June to mid-August, whereas Central psyllids were detected in late July and thereafter. These results suggest that haplotype composition of psyllid populations in potato fields throughout the 2012 growing season in south-central Idaho differed greatly from those in Washington and Oregon. Additionally, all psyllids were analyzed for the presence of Lso, and no Lso-positive psyllids were found in Washington and Oregon, whereas Lso-positive psyllids were found in south-central Idaho. These Lso-positive psyllids consisted of the Western, Northwestern, and Central haplotypes.
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