Holder Peter W, Armstrong Karen, Van Hale Robert, Millet Marc-Alban, Frew Russell, Clough Timothy J, Baker Joel A
Bio-Protection Research Centre, Lincoln University, Canterbury, New Zealand.
Department of Chemistry, Otago University, Dunedin, New Zealand.
PLoS One. 2014 Mar 24;9(3):e92384. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0092384. eCollection 2014.
Protecting a nation's primary production sector and natural estate is heavily dependent on the ability to determine the risk presented by incursions of exotic insect species. Identifying the geographic origin of such biosecurity breaches can be crucial in determining this risk and directing the appropriate operational responses and eradication campaigns, as well as ascertaining incursion pathways. Reading natural abundance biogeochemical markers using mass spectrometry is a powerful tool for tracing ecological pathways as well as provenance determination of commercial products and items of forensic interest. However, application of these methods to trace insects has been underutilised to date and our understanding in this field is still in a phase of basic development. In addition, biogeochemical markers have never been considered in the atypical situation of a biosecurity incursion, where sample sizes are often small, and of unknown geographic origin and plant host. These constraints effectively confound the interpretation of the one or two isotope geo-location markers systems that are currently used, which are therefore unlikely to achieve the level of provenance resolution required in biosecurity interceptions. Here, a novel approach is taken to evaluate the potential for provenance resolution of insect samples through multiple biogeochemical markers. The international pest, Helicoverpa armigera, has been used as a model species to assess the validity of using naturally occurring δ2H, 87Sr/86Sr, 207Pb/206Pb and 208Pb/206Pb isotope ratios and trace element concentration signatures from single moth specimens for regional assignment to natal origin. None of the biogeochemical markers selected were individually able to separate moths from the different experimental regions (150-3000 km apart). Conversely, using multivariate analysis, the region of origin was correctly identified for approximately 75% of individual H. armigera samples. The geographic resolution demonstrated with this approach has considerable potential for biosecurity as well as other disciplines including forensics, ecology and pest management.
保护一个国家的初级生产部门和自然资产在很大程度上取决于确定外来昆虫物种入侵所带来风险的能力。确定此类生物安全漏洞的地理来源对于确定这种风险、指导适当的行动应对措施和根除行动以及查明入侵途径至关重要。使用质谱法读取自然丰度生物地球化学标记物是追踪生态途径以及确定商业产品和法医感兴趣物品来源的有力工具。然而,迄今为止,这些方法在追踪昆虫方面的应用尚未得到充分利用,我们在这一领域的理解仍处于基础发展阶段。此外,在生物安全入侵这种非典型情况下,从未考虑过生物地球化学标记物,因为样本量通常很小,地理来源和植物宿主未知。这些限制有效地混淆了目前使用的一两种同位素地理位置标记系统的解释,因此这些系统不太可能达到生物安全拦截所需的来源分辨率水平。在此,采用了一种新方法来评估通过多种生物地球化学标记物确定昆虫样本来源分辨率的潜力。国际害虫棉铃虫已被用作模式物种,以评估利用单个蛾标本中天然存在的δ2H、87Sr/86Sr、207Pb/206Pb和208Pb/206Pb同位素比率以及微量元素浓度特征将其区域分配到原生地的有效性。所选的生物地球化学标记物中没有一种能够单独将来自不同实验区域(相距150 - 3000公里)的蛾区分开来。相反,使用多变量分析,大约75%的单个棉铃虫样本的原生地被正确识别。这种方法所展示的地理分辨率在生物安全以及包括法医、生态学和害虫管理在内的其他学科中具有相当大的潜力。