Abstract

Lycorma delicatula has expanded its distribution from China to Japan, Korea, and the USA, causing significant economic damage to vineyards in the latter two countries. However, in Japan, L. delicatula has long been limited to the Hokuriku region, central Japan, and no significant damage to crops has been reported since it was first reported there in 2009. Manipulation experiments and field observations in the Hokuriku region, where winter precipitation is extremely high, revealed that egg numbers and hatchability were significantly reduced in exposed places, especially when wax was excluded from the egg mass. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the population in Japan could be divided into at least two groups. Most L. delicatula samples from Hokuriku formed a clade with those from northwestern China. Samples from Okayama, where the distribution of L. delicatula was recently confirmed, had the same haplotype as those from central China, Korea, and the USA. These results suggest that environmental factors and genetic characteristics of L. delicatula are involved in the relatively slow expansion of its distribution in Hokuriku. Conversely, in Okayama, where precipitation is relatively low, the rapidly increasing haplotype in Korea and the USA was detected, leading to concerns that its distribution will expand further.

Highlights

  • The spotted lanternfly, Lycorma delicatula (White), is a sap-feeding insect native to China

  • Adults were mainly detected on 12 August. This suggests that L. delicatula has a univoltine life cycle in this region, as reported in South ­Korea[22] and Pennsylvania, U­ SA3

  • The results indicate that the 1st to 3rd instar larvae molt approximately every two weeks, and the period of development from the 4th instar to the adult phase is approximately one month in this region

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Summary

Introduction

The spotted lanternfly, Lycorma delicatula (White), is a sap-feeding insect native to China. In the USA, L. delicatula was first identified in Pennsylvania in ­20149 and its distribution expanded and its density increased, currently occupying 12 neighbouring ­states[4,10] (Fig. S1c). In both South Korea and the USA, L. delicatula has caused significant economic damage to v­ ineyards[4,11,12]. To date there have been no reports of significant damage to agricultural crops caused by L. delicatula, suggesting that some environmental and/or genetic factors have prevented its distributional range expansion in Japan. To evaluate the genetic structure of L. delicatula in Japan, molecular phylogenetic analysis was performed using newly collected samples from eight sites in Japan and one site in China and compared them with previously obtained sequences from China, South Korea, Japan, and the ­USA11,21

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