Article Abstract

Volume 31, No. (6), 2021 (December)
INFESTATION, GENETIC VARIATION ANALYSIS AND BIOLOGY STUDY OF BIOCONTROL AGENT ISTURGIA DISPUTARIA (GUENEES) ON ACACIA NILOTICA IN PAKISTAN
S. J. N. Ahmad1,2, W. Ahmad1, D. Majeed1, M. Sufian1, M. Z.Sharif1, A. Ali1, I. Ahuja3, A.M. Bones3 and J. N. Ahmad1,2*

1Dr. Jam Laboratory, Department of Entomology, University of Agriculture Faisalabad, Pakistan

2Plant Stress Physiology and Molecular Biology Lab, Department of Botany, University of Agriculture Faisalabad, Pakistan; 3Department of Biology, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU), NO-7491 Trondheim, Norway

Corresponding Author: `jam.ahmad@uaf.edu.pk
Page Number(s): 1762-1771
Published Online First: March 31, 2021
Publication Date: November 20, 2021
ABSTRACT

In Pakistan, Trees of Acacia nilotica are extremely valuable sources of fuel, small timber and have important pharmaceutical and medicinal value. But on the other hands, in Australia, Acacia nilotica subsp. indica is the most serious weed of national significance because of its potential of spread, invasiveness, economic and environmental impacts. Different strategies including leaf feeding insects as biological control agents are being used against such wild plant species. Surveys for leaf feeding insects on Acacia nilotica during 2018-2019 revealed the enhanced infestation (15%-38%) with the presence of a potential biological control agent, Isturgia disputaria in various districts of Punjab, Pakistan. For proper molecular identification, DNA was extracted from collected samples and polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was performed to amplify a 710bp fragment of the mitochondrial COI gene. The amplified PCR products were sequenced and phylogenetic examination and genetic evolutionary divergence (GD) showed that studied species of I. disputaria exhibited 99-100% homology (NCBI Acc. No MK301226) with other submitted sequences of I. disputaria (KX861182.1, KF147289.1) on NCBI GenBank database. Further, feeding and development potential of this species in no-choice tests on foliage of A. nilotica spp. indicated a good larval feeding and developmental capability for prickly acacia, A. nilotica indica and A. tomentosa indicating future threat for acacia forest in Pakistan. The larvae of I. disputaria completed their devel­opment life cycle 80-100% more successfully on A. nilotica subsp. indica and A. nilotica tomentosa than the larval development tested on other related species of Acacia existed in Pakistan. This is the first report of infestation, identification and biological features of potential biological control agent I. disputaria in Pakistan. This insect can also be reared to control wild species but, its increasing infestation on A. nilotica can be problematic for billion tree Project initiated by Government of Pakistan 

Keywords: Acacia nilotica, Isturgia disputaria, biological control, DNA barcoding, invasive species, PCR

Indexing

Web of Science (SCIE)

SCOPUS (Q3)

Status

Journal Metrics

Journal Impact Factor: 0.5 | (JCR Year: 2025) | Cite Score: 1.3

HEC Category: W

Current

ISSN Details

Print ISSN: 1018-7081

Electronic ISSN: 2309-8694

Verified
Search the Journal

Use the fields below to search for articles by Title, Author, or Keywords.