Pierce's Disease
Research Updates

piercesdisease.cdfa.ca.gov

What is Pierce's Disease?

Pierce's Disease is a bacterial infection, which is spread by bugs that feed on grapevines, particularly the "glassy winged sharpshooter." Grapevines that become infected with PD can quickly become sick and die.

glassy-winged sharpshooter

Invasion dynamics of the glassy-winged sharpshooter Homalodisca vitripennis (Germar) (Hemiptera : Cicadellidae) in French Polynesia


  • Author(s): Davies, N; Grandgirard, J; Hoddle, MS; Petit, JN; Roderick, GK;
  • Abstract: The glassy-winged sharpshooter, Homalodisca vitripennis (Germar) [formerly Homalodisca coagulata (Say)] (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae), has recently emerged as a serious invasive pest. From its natural range in the southeast USA and northeast Mexico, it invaded successively California (late 1980s), French Polynesia (1999), Hawaii (2004), and recently Easter Island (2005) inadvertently through the transportation of infested plants. In French Polynesia, H. vitripennis has reached impressive densities becoming an important pest threatening agriculture, native biodiversity, as well as being a major social nuisance. Since 1999, H. vitripennis spread rapidly from Tahiti to neighboring islands, colonizing most of the archipelagos of French Polynesia. In this paper, we present the results of surveys of H. vitripennis populations from 15 islands of French Polynesia and use these data to investigate the invasion dynamics and colonization processes of this pest in a tropical climate. We found H. vitripennis present in 10 islands with two new records confirmed. Our analyses suggest that: (1) H. vitripennis abundance is strongly associated with urbanization, with highest pest densities found in the most developed coastal areas of infested islands, (2) H. vitripennis may exhibit an Allee effect during the early phase of an invasion, and (3) the invasion dynamics of H. vitripennis conform to a stratified dispersal model marked by rapid long-distance human-mediated movement.
  • Publication Date: Oct 2008
  • Journal: Biological Invasions