Abstract

The entomopathogenic genus Ophiocordyceps includes a highly diverse group of fungal species, predominantly parasitizing insects in the orders Coleoptera, Hemiptera, Hymenoptera and Lepidoptera. However, other insect orders are also parasitized by these fungi, for example the Blattodea (termites and cockroaches). Despite their ubiquity in nearly all environments insects occur, blattodeans are rarely found infected by filamentous fungi and thus, their ecology and evolutionary history remain obscure. In this study, we propose a new species of Ophiocordyceps infecting the social cockroaches Salganea esakii and S. taiwanensis, based on 16 years of collections and field observations in Japan, especially in the Ryukyu Archipelago. We found a high degree of genetic similarity between specimens from different islands, infecting these two Salganea species and that this relationship is ancient, likely not originating from a recent host jump. Furthermore, we found that Ophiocordyceps lineages infecting cockroaches evolved around the same time, at least twice, one from beetles and the other from termites. We have also investigated the evolutionary relationships between Ophiocordyceps and termites and present the phylogenetic placement of O. cf. blattae. Our analyses also show that O. sinensis could have originated from an ancestor infecting termite, instead of beetle larvae as previously proposed.

Highlights

  • The genus Ophiocordyceps (Hypocreales, Ophiocordycipitaceae) comprises species typically pathogenic to insect hosts

  • We know of only 11 species infecting termites, i.e. O. bispora (Stifler 1941); O. octospora (Blackwell and Gilbertson 1981); O. communis (Sung et al 2007); O. asiatica, O. brunneirubra, O. khokpasiensis, O

  • We propose a new species of Ophiocordyceps that parasitizes two social wood-feeding cockroach species distributed in the southwestern part and Nansei Islands of Japan, both living inside decaying logs

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Summary

Introduction

The genus Ophiocordyceps (Hypocreales, Ophiocordycipitaceae) comprises species typically pathogenic to insect hosts. There are reports of beneficial, endosymbiotic species of sap-sucking hemipterans hosts (Quandt et al 2014; Gomez-Polo et al 2017; Matsuura et al 2018). The diversity of Ophiocordyceps has been increasingly unraveled in the last decade, especially with discoveries of species associated with Hymenoptera, Lepidoptera and Hemiptera (Araújo et al 2016, 2018; Luangsa-ard et al 2018). Our knowledge about species associated with blattodean insects (cockroaches and termites) is still restricted, especially regarding cockroach parasites. We know of only 11 species infecting termites, i.e. O_bispora (Stifler 1941); O. octospora (Blackwell and Gilbertson 1981); O. communis (Sung et al 2007); O. asiatica, O. brunneirubra, O. khokpasiensis, O

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