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1 November 2005 Retention of Cucurbit Yellow Vine Disease Bacterium Serratia marcescens Through Transstadial Molt of Vector Anasa tristis (Hemiptera: Coreidae)
Astri Wayadande, Benny Bruton, Jacqueline Fletcher, Sam Pair, Forrest Mitchell
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Abstract

Retention or loss of transmissibility after molting was tested for adult and nymphal squash bug, Anasa tristis (De Geer), a natural vector of the plant pathogen Serratia marcescens Bizio, the causal agent of cucurbit yellow vine disease. Squash bug adults and nymphs fed from bacteria-infiltrated squash cubes were caged on squash test plants and transferred weekly to new plants for eight consecutive weeks. Twelve percent of the bugs that acquired as adults transmitted the bacterium to at least one of the test plants; 75% of these transmitters inoculated more than one plant. Transmission to plants occurred as late as 3 to 8 weeks postacquisition. Ten percent of squash bugs that fed on S. marcescens as fifth instars inoculated plants after molting to the adult stage; 77% of these transmitters inoculated more than one plant. Two insects that fed on S. marcescens as third instars inoculated squash plants. When examined by scanning electron microscopy, the foregut cibaria of transmitting insects were free of bacteria-like structures. The ability of A. tristis to transmit S. marcescens after molting to the adult stage suggests that the hemocoel acts as the site of retention of transmissible bacteria.

Astri Wayadande, Benny Bruton, Jacqueline Fletcher, Sam Pair, and Forrest Mitchell "Retention of Cucurbit Yellow Vine Disease Bacterium Serratia marcescens Through Transstadial Molt of Vector Anasa tristis (Hemiptera: Coreidae)," Annals of the Entomological Society of America 98(6), 770-774, (1 November 2005). https://doi.org/10.1603/0013-8746(2005)098[0770:ROCYVD]2.0.CO;2
Received: 15 December 2004; Accepted: 1 March 2005; Published: 1 November 2005
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KEYWORDS
Heteroptera
propagative bacteria
squash bug
transmission
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