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Pathogen persistence in migratory insects : high levels of vertically-transmitted virus infection in field populations of the African armyworm.

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Pathogen persistence in migratory insects : high levels of vertically-transmitted virus infection in field populations of the African armyworm. / Vilaplana, Luisa; Wilson, Ken; Redman, Elizabeth M. et al.
In: Evolutionary Ecology, Vol. 24, No. 1, 01.2010, p. 147-160.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

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Vilaplana L, Wilson K, Redman EM, Cory JS. Pathogen persistence in migratory insects : high levels of vertically-transmitted virus infection in field populations of the African armyworm. Evolutionary Ecology. 2010 Jan;24(1):147-160. doi: 10.1007/s10682-009-9296-2

Author

Vilaplana, Luisa ; Wilson, Ken ; Redman, Elizabeth M. et al. / Pathogen persistence in migratory insects : high levels of vertically-transmitted virus infection in field populations of the African armyworm. In: Evolutionary Ecology. 2010 ; Vol. 24, No. 1. pp. 147-160.

Bibtex

@article{e946b2cd8aba4aedbd4a5ded2aee32a0,
title = "Pathogen persistence in migratory insects : high levels of vertically-transmitted virus infection in field populations of the African armyworm.",
abstract = "Pathogens face numerous challenges to persist in hosts with low or unpredictable population densities. Strategies include horizontal transmission, such as by the production of propagules that persist in the environment, and vertical transmission from adults to offspring. While many pathogens are capable of horizontal and vertical transmission little is known of their relative roles under realistic conditions of changing population densities. Insect baculoviruses can be transmitted both horizontally and vertically, although much of the work on baculovirus transmission has focussed on horizontal transmission that can be effective at high host densities. Here, we examine the prevalence of a vertically-transmitted, covert infection of nucleopolyhedrovirus (NPV) in field populations of the African armyworm, Spodoptera exempta, in Tanzania. African armyworm is a major pest of graminaceous crops in Africa and despite its migratory nature and boom and bust dynamics, NPV epizootics are common and can be intense at the end of the multi-generation armyworm season. We found that virtually all the insects collected in the field were positive for S. exempta NPV (SpexNPV) DNA and 60% of these insects had transcriptionally active virus. This suggests that SpexNPV is transmitted vertically at extremely high levels in field populations of S. exempta and can maintain a persistent infection without obvious symptoms. Similarly high levels of virus DNA and RNA were detected in a S. exempta colony that had been maintained in continuous culture for 5 years. This study provides an insight into mechanisms of pathogen persistence in migratory populations where hosts are unpredictable and indicates that covert infection may be more common and more relevant in disease dynamics of insects than had previously been thought.",
keywords = "Covert infection - Latency - NPV - Persistence - Sublethal - Epizootic",
author = "Luisa Vilaplana and Ken Wilson and Redman, {Elizabeth M.} and Cory, {Jenny S.}",
year = "2010",
month = jan,
doi = "10.1007/s10682-009-9296-2",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "147--160",
journal = "Evolutionary Ecology",
issn = "0269-7653",
publisher = "Springer Netherlands",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pathogen persistence in migratory insects : high levels of vertically-transmitted virus infection in field populations of the African armyworm.

AU - Vilaplana, Luisa

AU - Wilson, Ken

AU - Redman, Elizabeth M.

AU - Cory, Jenny S.

PY - 2010/1

Y1 - 2010/1

N2 - Pathogens face numerous challenges to persist in hosts with low or unpredictable population densities. Strategies include horizontal transmission, such as by the production of propagules that persist in the environment, and vertical transmission from adults to offspring. While many pathogens are capable of horizontal and vertical transmission little is known of their relative roles under realistic conditions of changing population densities. Insect baculoviruses can be transmitted both horizontally and vertically, although much of the work on baculovirus transmission has focussed on horizontal transmission that can be effective at high host densities. Here, we examine the prevalence of a vertically-transmitted, covert infection of nucleopolyhedrovirus (NPV) in field populations of the African armyworm, Spodoptera exempta, in Tanzania. African armyworm is a major pest of graminaceous crops in Africa and despite its migratory nature and boom and bust dynamics, NPV epizootics are common and can be intense at the end of the multi-generation armyworm season. We found that virtually all the insects collected in the field were positive for S. exempta NPV (SpexNPV) DNA and 60% of these insects had transcriptionally active virus. This suggests that SpexNPV is transmitted vertically at extremely high levels in field populations of S. exempta and can maintain a persistent infection without obvious symptoms. Similarly high levels of virus DNA and RNA were detected in a S. exempta colony that had been maintained in continuous culture for 5 years. This study provides an insight into mechanisms of pathogen persistence in migratory populations where hosts are unpredictable and indicates that covert infection may be more common and more relevant in disease dynamics of insects than had previously been thought.

AB - Pathogens face numerous challenges to persist in hosts with low or unpredictable population densities. Strategies include horizontal transmission, such as by the production of propagules that persist in the environment, and vertical transmission from adults to offspring. While many pathogens are capable of horizontal and vertical transmission little is known of their relative roles under realistic conditions of changing population densities. Insect baculoviruses can be transmitted both horizontally and vertically, although much of the work on baculovirus transmission has focussed on horizontal transmission that can be effective at high host densities. Here, we examine the prevalence of a vertically-transmitted, covert infection of nucleopolyhedrovirus (NPV) in field populations of the African armyworm, Spodoptera exempta, in Tanzania. African armyworm is a major pest of graminaceous crops in Africa and despite its migratory nature and boom and bust dynamics, NPV epizootics are common and can be intense at the end of the multi-generation armyworm season. We found that virtually all the insects collected in the field were positive for S. exempta NPV (SpexNPV) DNA and 60% of these insects had transcriptionally active virus. This suggests that SpexNPV is transmitted vertically at extremely high levels in field populations of S. exempta and can maintain a persistent infection without obvious symptoms. Similarly high levels of virus DNA and RNA were detected in a S. exempta colony that had been maintained in continuous culture for 5 years. This study provides an insight into mechanisms of pathogen persistence in migratory populations where hosts are unpredictable and indicates that covert infection may be more common and more relevant in disease dynamics of insects than had previously been thought.

KW - Covert infection - Latency - NPV - Persistence - Sublethal - Epizootic

UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=75549085773&partnerID=8YFLogxK

U2 - 10.1007/s10682-009-9296-2

DO - 10.1007/s10682-009-9296-2

M3 - Journal article

VL - 24

SP - 147

EP - 160

JO - Evolutionary Ecology

JF - Evolutionary Ecology

SN - 0269-7653

IS - 1

ER -