Planococcus citri

Planococcus citri
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Arthropoda
Class: Insecta
Order: Hemiptera
Suborder: Sternorrhyncha
Superfamily: Coccoidea
Family: Pseudococcidae
Genus: Planococcus
Species: P. citri
Binomial name
Planococcus citri
Risso, 1813

Planococcus citri, commonly known as the citrus mealybug, is a species of mealybugs native to Asia. It has been introduced to the rest of the world, including Europe, the Americas, and Oceania, as an agricultural pest. It is associated with citrus, but it attacks a wide range of crop plants, ornamental plants, and wild flora.[1]

Description

Mealybugs are sexually dimorphic. The adult female citrus mealybug is about 3 mm (0.12 in) long with a white, brownish,[1] or pink[2] body covered in white wax. The edges of the body are lined with waxy filaments. It has a light gray longitudinal line down its back. Its legs and antennae are brown. The adult female lacks wings and resembles a nymph. The adult male is slightly larger, has long wax filaments on the posterior end of the body, and has functional wings.[1] In flight the male resembles a gnat.[2][3]

The female deposits masses of eggs on plants. The masses, known as ovisacs, are covered in fluffy, cottony layers of wax filaments.[1][3] The ovisac can contain up to 20 shiny yellowish,[1] pink,[2] or amber[4] eggs each about 0.3 mm (0.012 in) long. The first-instar nymph is called a crawler. It is yellowish with red eyes and has a wax coating.[1] Crawlers are active and gregarious.[2] The female nymph resembles the adult female, while the male nymph is longer and narrower.[1] As they develop, the female nymph progresses through more instars than the male, and the male undergoes a pre-pupal stage.[1][5] The male constructs a cottony cocoon for pupation, and the female does not.[1]

The citrus mealybug looks very similar to the vine mealybug (Planococcus ficus), and the two species are mainly distinguished by the arrangement of pores and tubular ducts on the tiny body of the female. This similarity can pose a problem in agriculture. For example, when growers are ready to attempt biological pest control of either mealybug, the use of molecular analysis is recommended to confirm the identity of the species so an appropriate parasitoid can be employed.[6]

Taxonomy

Planococcus citri was first described in 1813 by the Niçard naturalist Antoine Risso. It belongs to the genus Planococcus in the mealybug family Pseudococcidae. They are classified under the superfamily Coccoidea (scale insects) in the order Hemiptera (true bugs).[1]

Biology

Infesting a marigold

The longevity of the adult depends on temperature, but while females live for several weeks, males live fewer than three days in adult form.[5] During this time, the male does not feed.[1] It takes flight with its single pair of wings and seeks females.[3] The female spends its longer lifetime feeding and producing eggs. Most other aspects of the life cycle depend on temperature, as well, including egg mortality, nymph mortality, rate of development, sex ratio, fecundity, and the length of the egg-laying period.[5]

During mating, the citrus mealybug is known to engage in "triple coitus"; a female may copulate with two males at the same time, and a third male may at least make attempts to join the process. Males spend the one or two days of their adult lives mating, and have been observed achieving copulation with up to 23 females, with an average of about nine.[7]

There are usually several generations per year. The mealybug is most common in spring and summer, its populations fluctuating according to temperature and available host plants. Peak abundance is noted in early summer in Florida citrus. Mealybugs infesting plants in the constant conditions of greenhouses have stable, steadily reproducing populations all year.[1]

All mealybug species investigated so far have endosymbionts:[8] symbiotic bacteria that live inside their bodies and synthesize useful compounds such as amino acids that the insect can utilize. Most mealybugs examined contain the betaproteobacterium Tremblaya princeps (Candidatus Tremblaya princeps). Other bacterial taxa have recently been found in mealybugs, as well. The citrus mealybug has a nested endosymbiosis. Its resident T. princeps contain their own endosymbionts, the gammaproteobacterium Moranella endobia (Candidatus Moranella endobia).[8][9] This "matryoshka" nested arrangement of a bacterium inside a bacterium inside an insect has been compared to the structure of a cell.[8] T. princeps has almost no metabolic functions except for the production of amino acids, having lost the genes for most other life functions. It relies on M. endobia for energy, and is even unable to reproduce without it.[8] T. princeps attracted attention when genetic analysis revealed that it has the smallest genome of any bacterium studied thus far. At 139 kilo-base pairs, it has only about 120 genes, which helps to explain why it cannot function without its endosymbiont.[9]

Impacts

The citrus mealybug can live "on almost any flowering plant".[4] It is considered a citrus pest with a preference for grapefruit,[1] but it has been found on plants from almost 70 families.[10] It is found on fruit, vegetable, and other food crops, including pineapple, sugar-apple, coconut, muskmelon, yam, figs, strawberry, sweet potato, mangoes, bananas, avocado, date palm, common guava, pomegranate, common pear, apple, eggplant, cacao tree, and soybean. It infests ornamental plants, including indoor plants, and it is common in greenhouses. It is found on Amaryllis, Begonia, Bougainvillea, Canna, Cyclamen, Impatiens, Narcissus, Nicotiana, cacti, coleus, croton, sedges, dahlias, spurges, gardenias, roses, and tulips.[1]

Adult females and nymphs suck sap with their piercing mouthparts.[5] This leads to plant damage in the form of wilting and chlorosis of the foliage, leaf drop, stunted growth, and sometimes the death of the plant. Fruits such as oranges become lumpy and discolored when the insect feeds on them, and they may fall off the tree. Insects packed with harvested fruits continue to feed, causing more losses during shipping. The mealybug secretes honeydew, which coats leaves and fruits and causes the growth of sooty molds. A layer of mold can reduce the ability of a leaf to perform photosynthesis, and makes fruit unmarketable.[1] The citrus mealybug is also a vector for plant viruses.[5]

Management

In agriculture, the insect can be managed with cultural, biological, and chemical control methods. Keeping orchard trees clipped so that they do not touch each other may help slow the spread. Cleaning farm equipment and other objects used in the field can help prevent its transport.[2] Few insecticides are known to be very effective on mealybugs, because they can hide and avoid spraying, their wax layers resist some chemicals, and their overlapping generations prevent complete control.[11]

A variety of natural enemies exist. One survey in Egypt noted 12 species of parasitoid wasps on the citrus mealybug. It also recorded nine predatory insects, including ladybird beetles, moths, a gall midge, and a green lacewing.[12]

Agents of biological control include a number of parasitoid wasps that attack the nymphs, including Leptomastidea abnormis, Leptomastix dactylopii, Chrysoplatycerus splendens, and Anagyrus pseudococci. Predators include the brown lacewing Sympherobius barberi, the green lacewing Chrysopa lateralis, hoverfly larvae, and the scale-feeding snout-moth larva.[1] The mealybug destroyer (Cryptolaemus montrouzieri), a ladybird beetle, readily attacks the citrus mealybug.[2]

Another option is a sticky trap baited with the sex pheromone of the species to capture males. The pheromone has been isolated and synthesized, and is commercially available.[2][13]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 Gill, H. K., et al. Citrus Mealybug, Planococcus citri (Risso) (Insecta: Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae). EENY-537. Entomology and Nematology, Florida Cooperative Extension Service. University of Florida IFAS. Published 2012, revised 2013.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Kerns, D., et al. Citrus Mealybug (Planococcus citri). Citrus Arthropod Pest Management in Arizona. University of Arizona Cooperative Extension, Tucson.
  3. 1 2 3 Citrus Mealybug. A Field Guide to Common Texas Insects. Texas A&M AgriLife Extension.
  4. 1 2 von Ellenrieder, N. Citrus mealybug (Planococcus citri). California Department of Food and Agriculture. 2003.
  5. 1 2 3 4 5 Goldasteh, S., et al. (2009). Effect of temperature on life history and population growth parameters of Planococcus citri (Homoptera, Pseudococcidae) on coleus (Solenostemon scutellarioides (L.) Codd.). Archives of Biological Sciences 61(2), 329-36.
  6. Cavalieri, V., et al. (2008). Identification of Planococcus ficus and Planococcus citri (Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae) by PCR-RFLP of COI gene. Zootaxa 1816, 65-68.
  7. Nelson-Rees, W. A. (1959). Triple coitus in the mealy bug, Planococcus citri (Risso). Nature 183, 479.
  8. 1 2 3 4 López-Madrigal, S., et al. (2013). Mealybugs nested endosymbiosis: going into the 'matryoshka' system in Planococcus citri in depth. BMC Microbiology 13(1), 74.
  9. 1 2 Husnik, F., et al. (2013). Horizontal gene transfer from diverse bacteria to an insect genome enables a tripartite nested mealybug symbiosis. Cell 153(7) 1567-78.
  10. Planococcus citri (Risso). Scale Insects: Identification Tools for Species of Quarantine Significance. Systematic Entomology Laboratory, ARS, USDA. 2007.
  11. Seabra, S. G., et al. (2013). Molecular evidence of polyandry in the citrus mealybug, Planococcus citri (Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae). PLoS ONE 8(7), e68241.
  12. Ahmed, N. and S. Abd-Rabou. (2010). "Host plants, geographical distribution, natural enemies and biological studies of the citrus mealybug, Planococcus citri (Risso) (Hemiptera: Pseudococcidae)". Egypt. Acad. J. Biolog. Sci. 3(1), 39-47.
  13. Zada, A., et al. (2004). Sex pheromone of the citrus mealybug Planococcus citri: Synthesis and optimization of trap parameters. Journal of Economic Entomology 97(2), 361-68.

External links

Media related to Planococcus citri at Wikimedia Commons

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