Abstract
The pear pest, Cacopsylla jukyungi (Hemiptera: Psyllidae), is the most damaging insect to commercial pears in South Korea. An assessment of the population genetic characteristics of the species will raise the potential of effective control. In the present study, we developed eight microsatellite markers specific to C. jukyungi and genotyped 132 individuals collected from 11 localities throughout South Korea. Populations showed lower observed heterozygosity than expected heterozygosity and slightly or highly positive values of inbreeding coefficients, suggesting that C. jukyungi is subjected to inbreeding. A strong dependence on commercial pear trees throughout the whole life cycle, even during overwintering, and a nationwide targeting of the overwintered adults are likely contributors to such heterozygosity deficiency. On the other hand, population analyses consistently indicated strong gene flow among populations, implying the presence of persistent factors that have facilitated this process. The nationwide expansion of pear orchards and the replacement with a popular new cultivar during the last 50 years, which may have accompanied the spread of C. jukyungi-bearing pear grafts and scions, are likely causes of such facilitated dispersal. Thus, a management strategy against unintended anthropogenic dispersal of the pear psyllid will be required for better control of C. jukyungi.
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