Resistance to three thrips species in Capsicum spp. depends on site conditions and geographic regions

Open Access
Authors
  • I.G.S. Visschers
  • J.L. Peters
  • L.L.H. Timmermans
  • E. Edwards
  • J.B. Ferrater
  • C.H. Balatero
  • M. Stratongjun
  • P.M. Bleeker ORCID logo
  • Z. van Herwijnen
  • G.A. Glawe
  • J. Bruin
  • N.M. van Dam
  • M. Macel
Publication date 11-2019
Journal Journal of Applied Entomology
Volume | Issue number 143 | 9
Pages (from-to) 929-941
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS)
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract
Capsicum species are commercially grown for pepper production. This crop suffers severely from thrips damage and the identification of natural sources of thrips resistance is essential for the development of resistant cultivars. It is unclear whether resistance to Frankliniella occidentalis as assessed in a specific environment holds under different conditions. Additionally, other thrips species may respond differently to the plant genotypes. Screening for robust and general resistance to thrips encompasses testing different Capsicum accessions under various conditions and with different thrips species. We screened 11 Capsicum accessions (C. annuum and C. chinense) for resistance to F. occidentalis at three different locations in the Netherlands. Next, the same 11 accessions were screened for resistance to Thrips palmi and Scirtothrips dorsalis at two locations in Asia. This resulted in a unique analysis of thrips resistance in Capsicum at five different locations around the world. Finally, all accessions were also screened for resistance to F. occidentalis in the Netherlands using a leaf disc choice assay, allowing direct comparison of whole plant and leaf disc assays. Resistance to F. occidentalis was only partially consistent among the three sites in the Netherlands. The most susceptible accessions were consistently susceptible, but which accession was the most resistant differed among sites. In Asia, one C. chinense accession was particularly resistant to S. dorsalis and T. palmi, but this was not the most resistant accession to F. occidentalis. Overall, resistance to F. occidentalis correlated with S. dorsalis but not with T. palmi resistance in the C. annuum accessions. Damage inflicted on leaf discs reflected damage on the whole plant level. Our study showed that identifying broad spectrum resistance to thrips in Capsicum may prove to be challenging. Breeding programmes should focus on developing cultivars suitable for growing in defined geographic regions with specific thrips species and abiotic conditions.
Document type Article
Note With supplementary materials
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1111/jen.12677
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jen.12677 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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