Interrelationship of Heterodera schachtii and Meloidogyne hapla on Tomato

Authors

  • G. D. Griffin

Abstract

Invasion of tomato (Lycopersicon esculentum L.) roots by combined and sequential inoculations of Meloidogyne hapla and a tomato population of Heterodera schachtii was affected more by soil temperature than by nematode competition. Maximum invasion of tomato roots, by M. hapla and H. schachtii occurred at 30 and 26 C, respectively. Female development and nematode reproduction (eggs per plant) of M. hapla was adversely affected by H. schachtii in combined inoculations of the two nematode species. Inhibition of M. hapla development and reproduction on tomato roots from combined nematode inoculations was more pronounced as soil temperature was increased over a range of 18-30 C and with prior inoculation of tomato with H. schachtii. M. hapla minimally affected H. schachtii female development, but there was significant reduction in the buildup of H. schachtii when M. hapla inoculation preceded that of H. schachtii by 20 days. Key words: northern root-knot nematode, sugarbeet cyst nematode, invasion, soil temperature, populations, inoculum density, development, reproduction, Lycopersicon esculentum.

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Published

1985-10-15

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Section

Articles