Publication | Closed Access
Relationships of plant parasitic nematodes to sites in native iowa prairies.
25
Citations
6
References
1972
Year
BiologyBiodiversityEngineeringPlant Parasitic NematodesPlant Paiasitic NematodesNatural SciencesEntomologyEvolutionary BiologyNative Iowa PrairiesNematode SpeciesPlant PathologyPest ManagementWell-drained SitesHyperparasiteNematologyNematode PestParasitologyHost-parasite Relationship
Soil samples were collected from three native Iowa prairies and analyzed for plant paiasitic nematodes and selected soil properties. Sites or nematodes were clustered with similarities related to habitat by a cluster analysis of site by nematode species and of nematodes by site. Some nematodes occurred in a wide range of prairie habitats, whereas others were more restricted. For example, greater numbers of Xiphinema americanum were in the low, well-drained sites than in the low wet sites or upland dry sites. Wet sites contained fewer nematodes than well-drained sites. Well-drained sites contained mainly Tylenchorhynchus maximus, Helicotylenchus pseudorobustus, and X. americanum. Wetter sites contained almost exclusively X. chambersi, H. hydrophilus, Telylenchus joctus, and an undescribed species of Tylenchorhynchus.
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