4.7 Article

Feeding on soybean crops changed gut bacteria diversity of the southern green stinkbug (Nezara viridula) and reduced negative effects of some associated bacteria

Journal

PEST MANAGEMENT SCIENCE
Volume 78, Issue 11, Pages 4608-4617

Publisher

JOHN WILEY & SONS LTD
DOI: 10.1002/ps.7080

Keywords

field experiments; gut bacteria; laboratory rearing; metagenomics; Nezara viridula

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Ciencia, Tecnologia e Innovacion Productiva (MINCyT) [PICT-2015-0684, PICT-2018-01371]

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The study found that the southern green stinkbug is able to modulate the colonization of gut bacteria under field conditions. Feeding on field-grown soybean reduced bacterial abundance and infection in the stinkbugs' guts. Additionally, the field conditions helped the nymphs recover from bacterial infection, despite an increase in lipid peroxidation and a decrease in cysteine proteases activity.
Background: The southern green stinkbug (Nezara viridula) is a mayor pest of soybean. However, the mechanism underlying stinkbug resistance to soybean defenses is yet ignored. Although gut bacteria could play an essential role in tolerating plant defenses, most studies testing questions related to insect-plant-bacteria interactions have been performed in laboratory condition. Here we performed experiments in laboratory and field conditions with N. viridula and its gut bacteria, studying gut lipid peroxidaxion levels and cysteine activity in infected and unifected nymphs, testing the hypothesis that feeding on field-grown soybean decreases bacterial abundance in stinkbugs. Results: Gut bacterial abundance and infection ratio were higher in N. viridula adults reared in laboratory than in those collected from soybean crops, suggesting that stinkbugs in field conditions may modulate gut bacterial colonization. Manipulating gut microbiota by infecting stinkbugs with Yokenella sp. showed that these bacteria abundance decreased in field conditions, and negatively affected stinkbugs performance and were more aggressive in laboratory rearing than in field conditions. Infected nymphs that fed on soybean pods had lower mortality, higher mass and shorter development period than those reared in the laboratory, and suggested that field conditions helped nymphs to recover from Yokenella sp. infection, despite of increased lipid peroxidation and decreased cysteine proteases activity in nymphs' guts. Conclusions: Our results demonstrated that feeding on field-grown soybean reduced bacterial abundance and infection in guts of N. viridula and highlighted the importance to test functional activities or pathogenicity of microbes under realistic field conditions prior to establish conclusions on three trophic interactions. (C) 2022 Society of Chemical Industry.

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