Effects of Tobacco Cyst Nematode on Growth of Flue-cured Tobacco

Authors

  • J. Wang
  • C. S. Johnson
  • J. D. Eisenback
  • T. D. Reed

Keywords:

cyst nematode, damage function, flue-cured tobacco, fosthiazate, globodera tabacum solanacearum, multiple-point model, nematode, nicotiana tabacum, plant disease loss, plant growth, resistance, tolerance

Abstract

The effects of infection by tobacco cyst nematode (Globodera tabacum solanacearum) on growth of flue-cured tobacco cultivars NC 567 (resistant) and K 326 (susceptible) were evaluated in the field in 1993 and 1994. Infection by G. t. solanacearum suppressed number of leaves, plant height, and fresh weight of leaves and feeder roots. Correlations between weekly egg densities of G. t. solanacearum collected from soil and host growth during 11 weeks after transplanting (WAT) were often inconsistent between cultivars and years. However, consistent correlations were obtained between root weight and egg densities collected 9 WAT, as well as between leaf weight from susceptible K 326 and nematode egg densities 6 WAT. Leaf and feeder root weights were significantly correlated with the area under the curve for all nematodes per gram of feeder root for K 326 in 1993 and for both cultivars in 1994. Reduction in feeder root weight by G. t. solanacearum was similar for the resistant and susceptible cultivars. Reduction in fresh leaf weight by G. t. solanacearum was twice as great (P = 0.07) for K 326 as for NC 567 in 1994. Incorporating nematode resistance into germplasm possessing improved yield and quality traits should produce cultivars more acceptable to growers.

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Published

1999-09-15

Issue

Section

Articles