1. Characterisation of amphimictic and parthenogenetic populations of Pratylenchus bolivianus Corbett, 1983 (Nematoda: Pratylenchidae) and their phylogenetic relationships with closely related species
- Author
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Javier Franco, Toon Janssen, Sergei A. Subbotin, Jason D. Stanley, Larry W. Duncan, John J. Chitambar, Lieven Waeyenberge, Alberto Troccoli, Renato N. Inserra, Gladis E. Munera Uribe, Paula Agudelo, and Medical Genetics
- Subjects
Costa Rica ,0106 biological sciences ,Bolivia ,China ,coxI mtDNA ,D2-D3 ,010607 zoology ,root-lesion nematode ,Colombia ,Biology ,phylogeny ,01 natural sciences ,hsp90 gene ,taxonomy ,plantparasitic nematode ,Phylogenetics ,morphology ,Botany ,Pratylenchus zeae ,Nephrolepis exaltata ,molecular ,Chile ,USA ,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics ,Phormium sp ,Morphometrics ,Pratylenchidae ,Nematology ,28S rRNA gene ,morphometrics ,Phylogenetic tree ,Physalis peruviana ,biology.organism_classification ,Pratylenchus penetrans ,Europe ,morphotypes ,SEM ,ITS rRNA ,Taxonomy (biology) ,Agronomy and Crop Science ,010606 plant biology & botany - Abstract
Amphimictic populations of root-lesion nematodes with numerous males and females having three lip annuli, a functional spermatheca and non-areolated lateral field occur on sword fern (Nephrolepis exaltata) in Florida. Identified for decades asPratylenchus penetrans, they appeared to be a morphologically separated species on the basis of a longer stylet (17.8-18.3 μm) thanP. penetrans(15-17 μm) and different lip pattern inen faceview (rectangularvsdumb-bell inP. penetrans). Morphologically similar amphimictic root-lesion nematodes have also been detected on flax lily in Costa Rica. Subsequent morphological observations indicated that these amphimictic root-lesion nematodes from fern and flax lily are closely related to the parthenogenetic speciesP. bolivianus, which has areolated lateral fields. In spite of the reproductive and morphological dissimilarities between these populations, their separation into different species was not supported by the results of molecular analyses of their DNA sequences. The populations used in these analyses included those that are amphimictic from Florida and Costa Rica and others that are parthenogenetic from the type locality in Bolivia, and geographically distant localities in Chile, China, Colombia and Europe. Phylogenetic analyses of the ITS and D2-D3 expansion segments of the 28S rRNA gene indicated that they belong to the same species,P. bolivianus, which consists of two morphotypes,P. bolivianus(am) amphimictic andP. bolivianus(pm) parthenogenetic, herein described and illustrated. Contradictory results were obtained by the analyses using a portion of thehsp90gene. The phylogenetic study, which included sequences of other root-lesion nematodes, a topotype and geographical distant populations ofP. zeae, revealed thatP. bolivianusandP. zeaeformed highly supported clades in the majority consensus trees. PCR with species-specific primers for rapid diagnostics ofP. bolivianusandP. zeaewere developed and tested.
- Published
- 2016
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