| Literature DB >> 19287753 |
M Oostendorp, D W Dickson, D J Mitchell.
Abstract
Isolates of Pasteuria penetrans were evaluated for ecological characteristics that are important in determining their potential as biological control agents. Isolate P-20 survived without loss of its ability to attach to its host nematode in dry, moist, and wet soil and in soil wetted and dried repeatedly for 6 weeks. Some spores moved 6.4 cm (the maximum distance tested) downward in soil within 3 days with percolating water. The isolates varied greatly in their attachment to different nematode species and genera. Of five isolates tested in spore-infested soil, three (P-104, P-122, B-3) attached to two or more nematode species, whereas B-8 attached only to Meloidogyne hapla and B-I did not attach to any of the nematodes tested. In water suspensions, spores of isolate P-20 attached readily to M. arenaria but only a few spores attached to other Meloidogyne spp. Isolate P-104 attached to all Meloidogyne spp. tested but not to Pratylenchus scribneri. Isolate B-4 attached to all species of Meloidogyne and Pratylenchus tested, but the rate of attachment was relatively low. Isolate P-Z00 attached in high numbers to M. arenaria when spores were extracted from females of this nematode; when extracted from M. javanica females, fewer spores attached to M. arenaria than to M. javanica or M. incognita.Entities:
Keywords: M. incognita; M. javanica; Meloidogyne arenaria; P. scribneri; Pasteuria penetrans; Pasteuria sp.; Pratylenchus brachyurus; bacterium; bioassay; biological control; host range; lesion nematode; root-knot nematode; survival
Year: 1990 PMID: 19287753 PMCID: PMC2619090
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nematol ISSN: 0022-300X Impact factor: 1.402