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Journal of Nematology logoLink to Journal of Nematology
. 1993 Jun;25(2):303–311.

Suppression of Meloidogyne chitwoodi with Sudangrass Cultivars as Green Manure

H Mojtahedi, G S Santo, R E Ingham
PMCID: PMC2619371  PMID: 19279773

Abstract

Meloidogyne chitwoodi race 1 reproduced on Piper sudangrass (Sorghum bicolor (L.) Moench), 332 (sudangrass hybrid), and P855F and P877F (sorghum-sudangrass hybrids), but failed to reproduce efficiently on Trudan 8, Trudex 9 (sudangrass hybrids), and Sordan 79, SS-222, and Bravo II (sorghum-sudangrass hybrids). Meloidogyne chitwoodi race 2 behaved similarly and reproduced more efficiently on Piper, P855F, and P877F than on Trudan 8, Trudex 9, or Sordan 79. The mean reproductive factor for M. chitwoodi races on the poorer hosts ranged from <0.1 to 0.9 under greenhouse and field conditions. Meloidogyne hapla failed to reproduce on any of the cultivars tested. In the laboratory, leaves of each cultivar chopped and incorporated as green manure reduced the M. chitwoodi population in infested soil more than unamended or wheat green manure treatments. Trudan 8, although limited to the zone of incorporation, protected this zone from colonization of upward migrating second stage juveniles (J2) for up to 6 weeks. Leaves of Trudan 8 but not roots were effective against M. chitwoodi, and J2 appeared to be more sensitive than egg masses. Trudan 8 and Sordan 79 as green manure reduced M. chitwoodi in bucket microplots under field conditions.

Keywords: Columbia root-knot nematode, control, green manure, host suitability, Meloidogyne chitwoodi, M. hapla, northern root-knot nematode, nematode, organic amendment, potato, Sorghum bicolor, sudangrass, sorghum-sudangrass hybrid

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