Abstract
Soil samples were collected in Western Australia from cereal fields at about
harvest time to determine levels of the endoparasitic nematodes,
Pratylenchus and Heterodera. A
systematic survey in 1997 and 1998 centred on the 40 shires with the highest
proportion of cereal cropping. One hundred and eighty samples were collected
in 1997 and 227 in 1998 at 10-km intervals along north–south transects
35 km apart. A targeted survey in 1997 included 98 soil samples from fields
selected by growers as having poor productivity without an evident cause. No
Heterodera cysts were found in any survey sample but
these could be extracted from soils previously known to be infested.
Pratylenchus neglectus was most commonly detected
followed by P. thornei and
P. zeae. Populations identified as
P. brachyurus, P. penetrans,
P. scribneri, and an undescribed species similar to
P. thornei were also found. Overall
Pratylenchus was extracted from 63% of samples
(mean 1.1, median 0.3, max. 22.0/mL of soil). Maps of the data indicate
that Pratylenchus populations were aggregated with some
areas having relatively light infestations. There was a positive relationship
with the intensity of cereal cropping and a negative relationship with pulse
cropping. The findings indicate that potentially damaging
Pratylenchus numbers occur in a significant proportion
of fields and highlight the need to develop and implement strategies to lower
population densities.
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
Cited by
31 articles.
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