Journal Article10.1071/CP13441
Yield response in chickpea cultivars and wheat following crop rotations affecting population densities of Pratylenchus thornei and arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi
TL;DR: Canola, linseed and fallow treatments reduced P. thornei populations, but low mycorrhizal spore levels in the soil after canola and fallowing treatments were associated with low chickpea yield, and this strategy is recommended for future use in assessing tolerance.
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Abstract: In Australia, root-lesion nematode (RLN; Pratylenchus thornei) significantly reduces chickpea and wheat yields. Yield losses from RLN have been determined through use of nematicide; however, nematicide does not control nematodes in Vertosol subsoils in Australia’s northern grains region. The alternative strategy of assessing yield response, by using crop rotation with resistant and susceptible crops to manipulate nematode populations, is poorly documented for chickpea. Our research tested the effectiveness of crop rotation and nematicide against P. thornei populations for assessing yield loss in chickpea. First-year field plots included canola, linseed, canaryseed, wheat and a fallow treatment, all with and without the nematicide aldicarb. The following year, aldicarb was reapplied and plots were re-cropped with four chickpea cultivars and one intolerant wheat cultivar. Highest P. thornei populations were after wheat, at 0.45–0.6 m soil depth. Aldicarb was effective to just 0.3 m for wheat and 0.45 m for other crops, and increased subsequent crop grain yield by only 6%. Canola, linseed and fallow treatments reduced P. thornei populations, but low mycorrhizal spore levels in the soil after canola and fallow treatments were associated with low chickpea yield. Canaryseed kept P. thornei populations low throughout the soil profile and maintained mycorrhizal spore densities, resulting in grain yield increases of up to 25% for chickpea cultivars and 55% for wheat when pre-cropped with canaryseed compared with wheat. Tolerance indices for chickpeas based on yield differences after paired wheat and canaryseed plots ranged from 80% for cv. Tyson to 95% for cv. Lasseter and this strategy is recommended for future use in assessing tolerance.
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Citations
Novel Sources of Resistance to Root-Lesion Nematode ( Pratylenchus thornei) in a New Collection of Wild Cicer Species ( C. reticulatum and C. echinospermum) to Improve Resistance in Cultivated Chickpea ( C. arietinum)
TL;DR: This study evaluated wild Cicer spp.
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Transcriptome analysis reveals key genes associated with root-lesion nematode Pratylenchus thornei resistance in chickpea.
Sonal M. Channale,Danamma Kalavikatte,John P. Thompson,Himabindu Kudapa,Prasad Bajaj,Rajeev K. Varshney,Rebecca S. Zwart,Manhendar Thudi,Manhendar Thudi +8 more
TL;DR: The root-lesion nematode, Pratylenchus thornei, is one of the major plant-parasitic nematodes causing significant yield losses in chickpea (Cicer arietinum).
Highly heritable resistance to root-lesion nematode (Pratylenchus thornei) in Australian chickpea germplasm observed using an optimised glasshouse method and multi-environment trial analysis
Matthew S. Rodda,K. B. Hobson,Clayton Forknall,Richard Daniel,Joshua P. Fanning,D. D. Pounsett,S. Simpfendorfer,Kevin Moore,Kirsty Owen,J. G. Sheedy,John P. Thompson,Grant J. Hollaway,Anthony Slater +12 more
TL;DR: Improved resistance found in a number of the newer chickpea cultivars tested shows that some advances have been made in the P. thornei resistance of Australian chickpeA cultivars, and that further targeted breeding and selection should provide incremental improvements.
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Predicting the slow decline of root lesion nematodes (Pratylenchus thornei) during host-free fallows to improve farm management decisions
TL;DR: Pratylenchus thornei is a major pathogen of cereal and legume crops around the world, especially in the northern grains region of eastern Australia, and the dominance of host species within the rotation has seen soil pathogen population densities increase.
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Pratylenchus thornei: The Relationship Between Presowing Nematode Density and Yield Loss in Wheat and Barley
TL;DR: The results explain why it is difficult to predict nematode levels based on cropping history and highlight the importance of growing resistant cultivars to maintain low levels of P. thornei to minimize risk of yield losses.
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