Soil texture and irrigation influence the transport and the development of Pasteuria penetrans, a bacterial parasite of root-knot nematodes

The transport of the spores of Pasteuria penetrans was studied in three contrasted textured soils (a sandy, a sandy-clay and a clay soils), cultivated with tomato, inoculated with juveniles of Meloidogyne javanica and watered with 25 or 150 mm day −1. One month after inoculation of the nematodes, 53...

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Veröffentlicht in:Soil biology & biochemistry 2004-03, Vol.36 (3), p.539-543
Hauptverfasser: Dabiré, K.R, Mateille, T
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The transport of the spores of Pasteuria penetrans was studied in three contrasted textured soils (a sandy, a sandy-clay and a clay soils), cultivated with tomato, inoculated with juveniles of Meloidogyne javanica and watered with 25 or 150 mm day −1. One month after inoculation of the nematodes, 53% of the spores inoculated were leached by water flow in the sandy soil but only 14% in the sandy-clay soil and 0.1% in the clay soil. No nematodes survived in the clay soil, while the population was multiplied both in the sandy and in the sandy-clay soils. But juveniles of M. javanica were more infected by P. penetrans in the sandy-clay soil than in the sandy soil. Comparing different combinations of bare soils containing 1.1–57% of clay showed that the best spore percolation and retention balance occurred in soils amended with 10–30% clay. However, the spore recoveries decreased when the soil was enriched with more than 30% clay. The role of clay particles on the extractability of spores and on their availability to attach to the nematode cuticle in the soil is discussed.
ISSN:0038-0717
1879-3428
DOI:10.1016/j.soilbio.2003.10.018