Skip to main content
Journal of Nematology logoLink to Journal of Nematology
. 1976 Jul;8(3):264–270.

Host Plants, Distribution, and Ecological Association of Hoplolaimus columbus

Stephen A Lewis, Fred H Smith
PMCID: PMC2620182  PMID: 19308233

Abstract

Selected species and cultivars of plants were evaluated for host suitability for Hoplolaimus columbus under greenhouse and fieht conditions. Sixteen agronomic plant cultivars were assayed for infection and reproduction after 2-6 months. Lima bean, soybean, cotton, and sweet corn were most favorable for nematode reproduction, whereas sweet potato was a nonhost plant. Field corn and watermelon, which tolerated H. columbus without significant yield losses, are suited for alternative crops in the southern coastal plain. Populations of H. columbus occurred in 15% of soyhean and 25% of cotton soil samples assayed. Population levels of H. columbus and Helicotylenchus spp. were correlated with fluctuations in various soil nutrient factors, whereas Meloidogyne spp. and Scutellonema spp. were not. No correlation was detected between the presence of H. columbus and populations of other nematode genera stndied.

Keywords: lance nematode, parasitism, host-parasite relations, ecology

Full Text

The Full Text of this article is available as a PDF (505.0 KB).


Articles from Journal of Nematology are provided here courtesy of Society of Nematologists

RESOURCES