Abstract
Simple SummaryThe cotton-melon aphid, Aphis gossypii Glover, is a polyphagous insect pest with many host-specialized biotypes. The mechanism of host specificity remains unknown in this aphid. In this study, we investigated whether bacterial symbionts control the host specificity of A. gossypii, as reported in some aphids. The two typical host-specialized biotypes used in this study produced significantly fewer nymphs on non-native hosts than on a native host, indicating a high host specificity of the two biotypes. We found that the winged morph of both biotypes had a significantly lower host specificity than its corresponding wingless morph. Bacterial analysis indicated that the composition of the bacterial symbionts was not different between the two biotypes, but within each biotype, the Buchnera abundance in the winged morph was only about 10% of that in the wingless morph. We suspected that a low Buchnera abundance was associated with a low host specificity. We compared the reproduction of A. gossypii with different Buchnera abundances, and did not find that a low Buchnera abundance resulted in a low host specificity. We then concluded that the host specificity of A. gossypii is not controlled by specific bacterial symbionts or Buchnera abundance.The cotton-melon aphid, Aphis gossypii Glover, is a polyphagous insect pest with many host-specialized biotypes, such as the Cucurbitaceae- and Malvaceae-specialized (CU and MA) biotypes. Bacterial symbionts were reported to determine the host range in some aphids. Whether this is the case in A. gossypii remains unknown. Here, we tested the host specificity of the CU and MA biotypes, compared the host specificity between the wingless and winged morph within the same biotype, and analyzed the composition of the bacterial symbionts. The reproduction of the CU and MA biotypes reduced by 66.67% and 82.79%, respectively, on non-native hosts, compared with on native hosts. The composition of bacterial symbionts was not significantly different between the CU and MA biotypes, with a Buchnera abundance >95% in both biotypes. Meanwhile, the winged morph produced significantly more nymphs than the wingless morph on non-native hosts, and the Buchnera abundance in the winged morph was only about 10% of that in the wingless morph. There seemed to be a relationship between the Buchnera abundance and host specificity. We regulated the Buchnera abundance by temperature and antibiotics, but did not find that a low Buchnera abundance resulted in the high reproduction on non-native hosts. We conclude that the host specificity of A. gossypii is not controlled by specific bacterial symbionts or by Buchnera abundance.
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