Mayetiola destructor is a species of fly that is a significant pest of cereal crops including wheat, barley and rye. Though a native of Asia it was transported into Europe and later into North America, supposedly in the straw bedding of Hessian troops during the American Revolution (1775–83), thus the origin of its common name. There are usually two generations a year but may be up to five. In the spring the dark-coloured female lays about 250 to 300 reddish eggs on plants, usually where the stems are covered by leaves; the larvae feed on the sap and weaken the plants so that they cannot bear grain.

Host Genome

Genome ID Level BUSCO Assessment
- Scaffold
C:94.7%[S:93.6%,D:1.1%],F:2.6%,M:2.7%,n:1367

Related Symbionts

1 records

Symbiont records associated with Mayetiola destructor

Classification Function Function Tags Reference
Wolbachia

Pseudomonadota

Bacteria

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Metagenome Information

0 records

Metagenome sequencing data associated with Mayetiola destructor

Run Platform Location Date BioProject

No metagenomes found

No metagenome records associated with this host species.

Amplicon Information

0 records

Amplicon sequencing data associated with Mayetiola destructor

Run Classification Platform Location Environment

No amplicons found

No amplicon records associated with this host species.

Related Articles

1 records

Research articles related to Mayetiola destructor

Title Authors Journal Year DOI
Mokhtar, NB; Maurady, A; Britel, MR ... Asimakis, E; Tsiamis, G
Insects
2020
10.3390/insects11060340