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Breeding
for Hessian Fly Resistance in Wheat
Roger H. Ratcliffe
USDA, ARS
Crop Protection and Pest Control Research Unit
West Lafayette, IN
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Fig. P1.

Adult Hessian fly, Mayetiola destructor. Pike and Antonelli 1981. |
The Hessian fly, Mayetiola destructor (Say)
has a long history of pestilence in the United States. The insect was first found
infesting wheat on Long Island, New York in 1779 and was believed to have been introduced
by Hessian soldiers in straw bedding for horses during the American Revolutionary War. The
Hessian fly now occurs in all major wheat-growing areas from the Atlantic Coast to the
Great Plains. It also is found in the western United States in parts of California,
Oregon, Washington and Idaho.
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Fig. P2.

Hessian fly eggs on upper surface of wheat leaf blade. USDA, Gallun, Foster. |
The fly is capable of infesting and injuring all
classes of wheat grown in the United States. Although wheat is the preferred host of the
Hessian fly, barley, rye and triticale are other cultivated cereal crops occasionally
infested. Several wild grasses may serve as hosts when these crops are not available.
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Fig. P3.
Early first instar Hessian fly larva. Note reddish color. USDA, Hatchett. |
When biotic and abiotic factors favor the insect's
survival and development, populations may increase rapidly from one generation to the
next. Although widespread outbreaks of the fly occur at irregular intervals in the U S,
local outbreaks frequently can cause extensive crop losses. Consequently, when or where
economic infestations may appear is not always predictable and methods for managing the
Hessian fly are mostly preventive rather than
remedial. |
Fig. P4.

Late second instar larvae and 'flaxseed'. USDA, Gallun, Foster. |
Management practices emphasize grower use of
resistant wheat varieties, when available, and application of cultural control practices
that include fall seeding of wheat after peak adult fly emergence (fly-free date) and
destruction of volunteer wheat. Of these practices, resistant wheat varieties have
provided the most reliable and economical form of management in much of the eastern U S
soft winter wheat region and the Great Plains. Further information about cultural
practices can be found in references cited at the end of this chapter.
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Fig. P5.

Stunting and dark green coloration of infested susceptible wheat seedling. USDA, Hatchett. |
Feeding injury by the Hessian fly is caused entirely
by the larva. On young plants, the larva feeds beneath the leaf sheath at the base of the
plant. The feeding mechanism of the larva and how it obtains food from the plant are not
fully understood. A study of the larval mouthparts has revealed highly specialized
mandibles that are probably used to inject salivary fluids into plants. These secretions
are believed to contain enzymatic substances that inhibit plant growth and increase cell
wall permeability that allows the larva to suck the juices from the plant.
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Fig. P6.

Normal growth and color of resistant wheat seedling. USDA, Hatchett. |
No injury to plant tissue has been observed at
feeding sites, although infested plants show a characteristic stunted appearance. The
number of stems and leaves and foliar and root weight are reduced in wheat plants infested
with Hessian fly larvae. Leaves of infested plants also appear more erect and are shorter
and darker green than those of uninfested plants. When infestations are severe, stunting
of seedlings occurs earlier and many of the young plants die after the larvae have
matured.
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Fig. P7.
Dead red first instar Hessian fly larvae on resistant wheat seedling. USDA, Gallun,
Foster. |
Larval feeding also reduces the winter hardiness of
wheat plants that survive the fall infestation. This contributes to further loss during
the winter. Heavily infested fields show areas of dead plants and thin stands. At lower
infestation levels, seedlings may survive and develop new tillers that enable the plant to
compensate for stunting of the main stem.
In the spring when plants are in the jointing stage, the larva feeds just above the node
between the leaf sheath and culm. Feeding causes injury that prevents normal elongation of
internodes and transport of nutrients to the developing spike. This injury reduces both
quantity and quality of the grain. The most obvious damage occurs when infested culms
break over at the weakened nodal areas. Much of the grain of broken culms is lost when the
crop is harvested.
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Fig. P8

Stem breakage associated with Hessian fly infestation on older susceptible wheat plants.
Agriculture Canada, Bob Lamb. |
Hessian fly infestation in seedlings can be
diagnosed by pulling up plants and examining the dead or stunted stems. Leaves should be
peeled down to their points of attachment with the stem. The larva or flaxseed is located
at the feeding site above the point of attachment. In older plants, the immature insect
can be found within the shortened internode at the point of infestation, or, in lodged
stems, just above the node where the stem broke.
Major programs to develop and release Hessian fly-resistant wheat varieties adapted to the
Great Plains hard wheat and eastern U S soft winter wheat regions began in the 1920s and
1940s, respectively. The documented release of sixty Hessian fly-resistant varieties
during the period from 1950 to 1983 is evidence of the success of these programs. In areas
where resistant varieties have been grown for several years, losses by the Hessian fly
have been reduced to <1%.
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Numerous sources of resistance have been identified
and incorporated into resistant wheat varieties, and varieties with new
sources of resistance are continually developed and released when older
varieties lose effectiveness. Resistance in these sources is dominant, partially
dominant, or recessive, and conditioned by single, duplicate or multiple
genetic factors derived from common wheat, Triticum aestivum L, durum
wheat, T. turgidum L, the wild wheat, T. tauschii (Coss) Schmal.,
and rye, Secale cereale L. Twenty-eight major genes designated H1
through H28 have been described. Of the 28 genes, 8 were selected from common
wheat, 13 from durum wheat, 5 from T. tauschii, and
2 from rye.
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Antibiosis is the primary mechanism of resistance associated
with these genes and is expressed as the death of the first-instar larvae within 2-3 days
after establishment. The biochemical nature of antibiosis in wheat to the Hessian fly has
not been determined for any gene. Research conducted to date has demonstrated no
significant correlation between Hessian fly resistance and silica in sheaths of wheat
plants or free amino-acids, organic acids, and sugars in plants.
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Although the biochemical basis of resistance in wheat to Hessian
fly is not known, research supports the hypothesis that hypersensitivity is the phenotypic
basis of resistance in the Hessian fly-wheat interaction and involves
"recognition" of an avirulence gene product or process by the plant in response
to larval feeding.
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Other genetic factors for resistance in wheat to the Hessian fly
have been reported, but have been less utilized in breeding programs or variety
development. These include resistance derived from the wheat varieties 'Kawvale' and
'Marquillo', which may include tolerance to larval feeding as well as antibiosis.
Marquillo has been a durable source of resistance in several varieties for more than 30
years without biotype development. This type of resistance, along with antibiosis
associated with the H3 gene, has been used extensively in the hard red winter wheat
region of the Great Plains.
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Tolerance also has been identified in some soft red winter wheat
germplasm and is expressed as the ability of plants to avoid or recover from stunting
following attack by Hessian fly larvae. Fly larvae survive and develop normally on
'tolerant' plants. Resistance in pubescent-leafed wheat varieties is due primarily to
antixenosis, expressed as oviposition non-preference by Hessian fly females. Antibiosis of
eggs or newly hatched larvae also may occur under hot, dry conditions due to increased
desiccation of both life stages on leaves with greater pubescence.
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The development of virulent biotypes of the Hessian fly poses
the greatest threat to the permanence of resistance in wheat varieties. The growing of
wheat varieties with high levels of resistance exerts a strong selection pressure on
Hessian fly populations that favors races, or biotypes, capable of surviving and
reproducing on resistant wheat. Therefore the biotype composition of Hessian fly
populations within wheat growing regions changes with exposure to wheat varieties carrying
specific resistance genes, and over time the effectiveness of varieties in preventing
infestation by specific biotypes is reduced.
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Sixteen Hessian fly biotypes, classified as 'GP' (Great Plains)
and 'A' through 'O', have been identified on the basis of their differential response to
the resistance genes H3, H5, H6, and H7H8 in wheat. The
Great Plains biotype is considered to have been predominant in Hessian fly field
populations prior to exposure to resistant wheat varieties and subsequent selection for
virulence to resistance genes in these varieties. Hessian fly biotypes 'A' through 'O'
differ in the number of resistance genes to which they express virulence. Biotype 'L' is
the most virulent and can attack wheat varieties with any of these genes.
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Major shifts in biotype composition and virulence to resistance
genes in wheat occurred in Hessian fly populations throughout the eastern United States
from the mid-1980's to late-1990's that greatly reduced effectiveness of all deployed
genes. Information from field surveys conducted during this period demonstrated that
Hessian fly biotype L was predominant in populations throughout the Mid-west
(Illinois, Indiana, Missouri, and Ohio), the mid-south (northern Alabama and Arkansas, and
southern Tennessee), and the mid-Atlantic states of Delaware, Maryland, North Carolina,
and Virginia. For this reason, wheat varieties carrying resistance genes H3, H5,
H6, and H7H8 are ineffective in these areas. A soft winter wheat
variety carrying Hessian fly resistance associated with the H13 gene was released
jointly by Purdue University/USDA, ARS in 1998. The variety, INW9811, is resistant to
Hessian fly populations from throughout the mid-west and mid-south soft winter wheat
growing area.
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Hessian fly populations in the lower southeastern US are
predominantly biotype O, therefore resistance associated with the gene
combination H7H8 is effective in southern Alabama, Georgia, and South
Carolina, and northern Florida, in addition to resistance associated with H13. The
composition of Hessian fly populations in eastern Washington and northern Idaho varies
considerably from those found in the eastern US soft winter wheat region. Whereas biotype
GP, which cannot survive on Hessian fly-resistant wheat, is absent in the
eastern US, it makes up 25 to 75% of populations sampled in Washington and Idaho.
Therefore, wheat varieties carrying all available sources of resistance remain moderately
to highly effective in the Pacific Northwest.
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The optimum use of present and future resistance genes in wheat
breeding programs is dependent on the development of gene deployment strategies that
improve the durability of resistance in wheat varieties exposed to Hessian fly
populations. Breeding strategies incorporating the use of moderately resistant genes or
combinations of genes with different levels of resistance, genes that respond differently
to abiotic factors such as temperature, and selective use of genes depending upon the
biotype composition of Hessian fly populations are being explored. Molecular markers
associated with resistance genes in wheat continue to be identified and will be of value
in developing marker assisted selection to complement conventional selection procedures in
breeding programs. Marker assisted selection will be very useful in stacking genes for
Hessian fly resistance in wheat varieties. Implementation of these strategies will reduce
selection pressure on fly populations that would favor the increase of virulent genotypes.
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Selected References
Buntin, D. G. and J. W. Chapin. 1990. Biology of Hessian fly (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae)
in the southeastern United States: Geographic variation and temperature-dependent
phenology. J. Econ. Entomol. 83:1015-1024.
Cambron, S. E., F. L. Patterson, H. W. Ohm, R. H. Ratcliffe, and G. G. Safranski. 1995.
Genetic analyses of Hessian fly resistance in eight durum wheat introductions. Crop Sci.
35:708-714.
Dweikat, I., H. Ohm, S. Mackenzie, F. Patterson, S. Cambron, and R. Ratcliffe. 1994.
Association of a DNA marker with Hessian fly resistance gene H9 in wheat. Theor. Appl.
Genet. 89:964--968.
Formusoh, E. S., J. H. Hatchett, W. C. Black IV, and J. J. Stuart. 1996. Sex-linked
inheritance of virulence against wheat resistance gene H9 in the Hessian fly. Ann.
Entomol. Soc. Amer. 89:428-434.
Friebe, B., J. H. Hatchett, R. G. Sears, and B. S. Gill. 1990. Transfer of Hessian fly
resistance from 'Chaupon' rye to hexaploid wheat via a 2BS/2RL wheat-rye chromosome
translocation. Theor. Appl. Genet. 79:385-389.
Gagne, R. J. and J. H. Hatchett. 1989. Instars of the Hessian fly (Diptera:
Cecidomyiidae). Ann. Entomol. Soc. Am. 82:73-79.
Gallun, R. L. and L. P. Reitz. 1971. Wheat cultivars resistant to Hessian fly. USDA,
ARS, Production Res. Rept. 134:16.
Grover, P. B., Jr. 1995. Hypersensitive response of wheat to the Hessian fly. Entomol.
Exp. Appl. 74:283-294.
Hatchett, J. H., G. L. Kreitner, and R. J. Elzinga. 1990. Larval mouthparts and feeding
mechanism of the Hessian fly (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae). Ann. Entomol. Soc. Am.
83:1137-1147.
Hatchett, J. H., T. J. Martin, and R. W. Livers. 1981. Expression and inheritance of
resistance to Hessian fly in synthetic hexaploid wheats derived from Triticum tauschii
(Coss) Schmal. Crop Sci. 21:731-734.
Hatchett, J. H., R. G. Sears, and T. S. Cox. 1993. Inheritance of resistance to Hessian
fly in rye and wheat-rye translocation lines. Crop Sci. 33:730-734.
McKay, P. A. and J. H. Hatchett. 1984. Mating behavior and evidence of a female sex
pheromone in the Hessian fly, Mayetiola destructor (Say) (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae). Ann.
Entomol. Soc. Amer. 77:616-620.
Ohm, H. W., H. C. Sharma, F. L. Patterson, R. H. Ratcliffe, and M. Obanni. 1995.
Linkage relationships among genes on wheat chromosome 5A that condition resistance to
Hessian fly. Crop Sci. 35:1603-1607.
Ratcliffe, R .H., H. W. Ohm, F. L. Patterson, S. E. Cambron, and G. G. Safranski. 1996.
Response of resistance genes H9 to H19 in wheat to Hessian fly (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae)
laboratory biotypes and field populations from the Eastern United States. J. Econ.
Entomol. 89:1309-1317.
Ratcliffe, R. H. and J. H. Hatchett. 1997. Biology and genetics of the Hessian fly and
resistance in wheat. p. 47-56. In K. Bondari [ed], New Developments in Entomology.
Publisher, Research Signpost, Scientific Information Guild, Trivandrum, India.
Ratcliffe, R. H., S. E. Cambron, K. L. Flanders, N. A. Bosque-Perez, S. L. Clement, and
H. W. Ohm. 2000. Biotype composition of Hessian fly (Diptera: Cecidomyiidae) populations
from the southeastern, Midwestern, and northwestern United States and virulence to
resistance genes in wheat. J. Econ. Entomol. 93:1319-1328. |
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