Invasion And Spread Of The Neotropical Leafhopper Curtara Insularis (Hemiptera, Cicadellidae) In Africa And North America And The Role Of High-Altitude Windborne Migration In Invasive Insects
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NeoBiota
Abstract
Invasive insects threaten ecosystem stability, public health, and food security. Documenting newly
invasive species and understanding how they reach into new territories, establish populations,
and interact with other species remain vitally important. Here, we report on the invasion of the
South American leafhopper, Curtara insularis into Africa, where it has established populations in
Ghana, encroaching inland at least 350 km off the coast. Importantly, 80% of the specimens
collected were intercepted between 160 and 190 m above ground. Further, the fraction of this
species among all insects collected was also higher at altitude, demonstrating its propensity to
engage in high-altitude windborne dispersal. Its aerial densities at altitude translate into millions of
migrants/km over a year, representing massive propagule pressure. Given the predominant south-westerly winds, these sightings suggest an introduction of C. insularis into at least one of the Gulf
of Guinea ports. To assess the contribution of windborne dispersal to its spread in a new territory,
we examine records of C. insularis range-expansion in the USA. Reported first in 2004 from central
Florida, it reached north Florida (Panhandle) by 2008–2011 and subsequently spread across the
southeastern and south-central US. Its expansion fits a “diffusion-like” process with 200—300 km
long “annual displacement steps”—a pattern consistent with autonomous dispersal rather than
vehicular transport. Most “steps” are consistent with common wind trajectories from the nearest
documented population, assuming 2—8 hours of wind-assisted flight at altitude. Curtara insularis has been intercepted at US ports and on trucks. Thus, it uses multiple dispersal modalities, yet its
rapid overland spread is better explained by its massive propagule pressure linked with its high-altitude windborne dispersal. We propose that high-altitude windborne dispersal is common yet
under-appreciated in invasive insect species.
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Research Article
Citation
Nartey, R., Chamorro, L., Buffington, M., Afrane, Y. A., Mohammed, A. R., Owusu-Asenso, C. M., ... & Lehmann, T. (2024). Invasion and spread of the neotropical leafhopper Curtara insularis (Hemiptera: Cicadellidae) in Africa and North America and the role of high-altitude windborne migration in invasive insects. bioRxiv, 2024-05.
