Diversity of plant parasitic nematodes characterized from fields of the French national monitoring programme for the Columbia root-knot nematode.

Plant parasitic nematodes are highly abundant in all agrosystems and some species can have a major impact on crop yields. To avoid the use of chemical agents and to find alternative methods to manage these pests, research studies have mainly focused on plant resistance genes and biocontrol methods i...

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Main Authors: Nathan Garcia, Eric Grenier, Alain Buisson, Laurent Folcher
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2022-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0265070
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author Nathan Garcia
Eric Grenier
Alain Buisson
Laurent Folcher
author_facet Nathan Garcia
Eric Grenier
Alain Buisson
Laurent Folcher
author_sort Nathan Garcia
collection DOAJ
description Plant parasitic nematodes are highly abundant in all agrosystems and some species can have a major impact on crop yields. To avoid the use of chemical agents and to find alternative methods to manage these pests, research studies have mainly focused on plant resistance genes and biocontrol methods involving host plants or natural enemies. A specific alternative method may consist in supporting non-damaging indigenous species that could compete with damaging introduced species to decrease and keep their abundance at low level. For this purpose, knowledge about the biodiversity, structure and functioning of these indigenous communities is needed in order to carry out better risk assessments and to develop possible future management strategies. Here, we investigated 35 root crop fields in eight regions over two consecutive years. The aims were to describe plant parasitic nematode diversity and to assess the potential effects of cultivation practices and environmental variables on communities. Community biodiversity included 10 taxa of plant parasitic nematodes. Despite no significant abundance variations between the two sampling years, structures of communities varied among the different regions. Metadata collected for the past six years, characterizing the cultural practices and soils properties, made it possible to evaluate the impact of these variables both on the whole community and on each taxon separately. Our results suggest that, at a large scale, many variables drive the structuration of the communities. Soil variables, but also rainfall, explain the population density variations among the geographical areas. The effect of the variables differed among the taxa, but fields with few herbicide applications and being pH neutral with low heavy metal and nitrogen concentrations had the highest plant parasitic nematode densities. We discuss how these variables can affect nematode communities either directly or indirectly. These types of studies can help to better understand the variables driving the nematode communities structuration in order to support the abundance of indigenous non-damaging communities that could compete with the invasive species.
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spelling doaj.art-0c53712925d74488a980d0695817c3922022-12-22T02:00:37ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032022-01-01173e026507010.1371/journal.pone.0265070Diversity of plant parasitic nematodes characterized from fields of the French national monitoring programme for the Columbia root-knot nematode.Nathan GarciaEric GrenierAlain BuissonLaurent FolcherPlant parasitic nematodes are highly abundant in all agrosystems and some species can have a major impact on crop yields. To avoid the use of chemical agents and to find alternative methods to manage these pests, research studies have mainly focused on plant resistance genes and biocontrol methods involving host plants or natural enemies. A specific alternative method may consist in supporting non-damaging indigenous species that could compete with damaging introduced species to decrease and keep their abundance at low level. For this purpose, knowledge about the biodiversity, structure and functioning of these indigenous communities is needed in order to carry out better risk assessments and to develop possible future management strategies. Here, we investigated 35 root crop fields in eight regions over two consecutive years. The aims were to describe plant parasitic nematode diversity and to assess the potential effects of cultivation practices and environmental variables on communities. Community biodiversity included 10 taxa of plant parasitic nematodes. Despite no significant abundance variations between the two sampling years, structures of communities varied among the different regions. Metadata collected for the past six years, characterizing the cultural practices and soils properties, made it possible to evaluate the impact of these variables both on the whole community and on each taxon separately. Our results suggest that, at a large scale, many variables drive the structuration of the communities. Soil variables, but also rainfall, explain the population density variations among the geographical areas. The effect of the variables differed among the taxa, but fields with few herbicide applications and being pH neutral with low heavy metal and nitrogen concentrations had the highest plant parasitic nematode densities. We discuss how these variables can affect nematode communities either directly or indirectly. These types of studies can help to better understand the variables driving the nematode communities structuration in order to support the abundance of indigenous non-damaging communities that could compete with the invasive species.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0265070
spellingShingle Nathan Garcia
Eric Grenier
Alain Buisson
Laurent Folcher
Diversity of plant parasitic nematodes characterized from fields of the French national monitoring programme for the Columbia root-knot nematode.
PLoS ONE
title Diversity of plant parasitic nematodes characterized from fields of the French national monitoring programme for the Columbia root-knot nematode.
title_full Diversity of plant parasitic nematodes characterized from fields of the French national monitoring programme for the Columbia root-knot nematode.
title_fullStr Diversity of plant parasitic nematodes characterized from fields of the French national monitoring programme for the Columbia root-knot nematode.
title_full_unstemmed Diversity of plant parasitic nematodes characterized from fields of the French national monitoring programme for the Columbia root-knot nematode.
title_short Diversity of plant parasitic nematodes characterized from fields of the French national monitoring programme for the Columbia root-knot nematode.
title_sort diversity of plant parasitic nematodes characterized from fields of the french national monitoring programme for the columbia root knot nematode
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0265070
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