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New Records of Ditylenchus Species from Southern Alberta, Canada

Authors :
Maria Munawar
Atta Ur Rahman
Pablo Castillo
Dmytro P. Yevtushenko
University of Lethbridge
Canadian Agri-Science Cluster for Horticulture
Potato Growers of Alberta
McCain Foods
Cavendish Farms
Lamb Weston
Castillo, Pablo
Yevtushenko, Dmytro P.
Source :
Plants, Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages: 998
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute, 2023.

Abstract

The presence of plant-parasitic nematodes (PPNs) in cultivated areas is a limiting factor in achieving marketable crop yield. To control and alleviate the effects of these nematodes and determine appropriate management strategies, species-level identification is crucial. Therefore, we conducted a nematode diversity survey, which resulted in the detection of four Ditylenchus species in cultivated areas of southern Alberta, Canada. The recovered species had six lines in the lateral field, delicate stylets (>10 µm long), distinct postvulval uterine sacs, and pointed to rounded tail tips. The morphological and molecular characterization of these nematodes revealed their identity as D. anchilisposomus, D. clarus, D. tenuidens and D. valveus, all of which are members of the D. triformis group. All of the identified species were found to be new records in Canada except for D. valveus. Accurate Ditylenchus species identification is crucial because false-positive identification can result in the implementation of quarantine measures over the detected area. Our current study not only documented the presence of Ditylenchus species from southern Alberta, but also described their morpho-molecular characteristics and subsequent phylogenetic relationships with related species. The results of our study will aid in the decision on whether these species should become a part of nematode management programs since nontarget species can become pests due to changes in cropping patterns or climate.<br />This work was supported by the Potato Early Dying Complex project funded by the University of Lethbridge Research Operating Fund, and the Canadian Potato Early Dying Network project funded by the Canadian Agri-Science Cluster for Horticulture 3 grant to D.P.Y., in collaboration with the Potato Growers of Alberta (Taber, AB, Canada), McCain Foods Canada Ltd. (Chin, AB, Canada), Cavendish Farms Corp. (Lethbridge, AB, Canada), and Lamb Weston Inc. (Purple Springs, AB, Canada).

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plants, Volume 12, Issue 5, Pages: 998
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....93a9e1fc1f53c45e95210c35219be516