Survival of root ‐lesion nematodes (Pratylenchus thornei) after wheat growth in a vertisol is influenced by rate of progressive soil desiccation

Abstract The root‐lesion nematode (Pratylenchus thornei) is a major pathogen of wheat in the subtropical grain region of eastern Australia. Experiments were conducted to learn whether soil desiccation can account for the rapid fall in peak P. thornei population densities noted in the field after wheat matures. The decline in population densities of P. thornei after growth of wheat was measured on progressive desiccation of soil with roots by fast and slow drying methods. The vertisolic soil of initial moisture content 45% w/w (or matric potential of pF 3.3) was dried in 5% decrements to an air‐dried gravimetric moisture content of 15% (pF 5.6) taking 10.7 h for fast drying and 91.5 h for slow drying. After drying, live nematodes were extracted with Whitehead trays for 2 and 7 days and counted in four life stages (adults and juvenile stages J2, J3 and J4). Fast drying resulted in a sigmoidal decline in total P. thornei with only 5% of the population alive in soil at 15% moisture content, but slow drying had no significant effect on the population density. The percentage of nematodes extracted at 2 days compared with the total extracted over 7 days in undried soil (∼89% of total) declined quadratically on desiccation to be 48% (fast drying) and 78% (slow drying) at 15% moisture content. With fast drying, the proportion of adults and J2 decreased whereas the proportion of J4 increased as the soil dried. With slow drying, the proportion of J2 and J3 stages decreased while t...
Source: Annals of Applied Biology - Category: Biology Authors: Tags: RESEARCH ARTICLE Source Type: research