TL;DR: Bacteria are ubiquitous and destroy nematodes in virtually all soils because of their constant association in the rhizosphere, and application of some of these bacteria has given very promising results.
Abstract: Nematodes in Biological Control.- Biological Control Potentials Of Predatory Nematodes.- Integration of Biological Control with other Methods of Nematode Management.- Mode of Action and Interactions of Nematophagous Fungi.- Crops Ecology and Control.- Control and Management of Plant Parasitic Nematode Communities in a Soil Conservation Approach.- Management of Nematodes of Andean Tuber and Grain Crops.- Ipm of Soybean Cyst Nematode in The Usa.- The Soybean Cyst Nematode Heterodera Glycines Ichinohe, 1952 in Argentina.- Nematode Management in Cotton.- Technological Advances in Sustainable Management.- The Potential of Rna Interference for the Management of Phytoparasitic Nematodes.- Potential Use of Pasteuria Spp. In The Management of Plant Parasitic Nematodes.- Sustainable Methods For Management Of Cyst Nematodes.- Biofumigation To Manage Plant-Parasitic Nematodes.- Data Analysis and Knowledge-based Applications.- Global Knowledge And Its Application For The Integrated Control And Management Of Nematodes On Wheat.- Integrated Management Of Root-Knot Nematodes In Mediterranean Horticultural Crops.- Modeling Nematodes Regulation By Bacterial Endoparasites.
TL;DR: It is shown that infected hosts have enhanced reproduction before castration and that this resource conflict is subject to genetic variation among host and parasite genotypes within a population and is therefore likely to be an important force in the coevolution of virulence in this system.
Abstract: It has been suggested that the harm parasites cause to their hosts is an unavoidable consequence of parasite reproduction with costs not only for the host but also for the parasite. Castrating parasites are thought to minimize their costs by reducing host fecundity, which may minimize the chances of killing both host and parasite prematurely. We conducted a series of experiments to understand the evolution of virulence of a castrating bacterium in the planktonic crustacean Daphnia magna. By manipulating food levels during the infection of D. magna with the bacterium Pasteuria ramosa, we showed that both antagonists are resource‐limited and that a negative correlation between host and parasite reproduction exists, indicating resource competition among the antagonists. Pasteuria ramosa also induces enhanced growth of its hosts (gigantism), which we found to be negatively correlated with host fecundity but positively correlated with parasite reproduction. Because infected hosts never recovered from...
TL;DR: The objective of this review is to summarize the current knowledge of the biology, ecology, and biological control potential of P. penetrans and other Pasteuria members.
Abstract: Pasteuria penetrans is a mycelial, endospore-forming, bacterial parasite that has shown great potential as a biological control agent of root-knot nematodes. Considerable progress has been made during the last 10 years in understanding its biology and importance as an agent capable of effectively suppressing root-knot nematodes in field soil. The objective of this review is to summarize the current knowledge of the biology, ecology, and biological control potential of P. penetrans and other Pasteuria members. Pasteuria spp. are distributed worldwide and have been reported from 323 nematode species belonging to 116 genera of free-living, predatory, plant-parasitic, and entomopathogenic nematodes. Artificial cultivation of P. penetrans has met with limited success; large-scale production of endospores depends on in vivo cultivation. Temperature affects endospore attachment, germination, pathogenesis, and completion of the life cycle in the nematode pseudocoelom. The biological control potential of Pasteuria spp. have been demonstrated on 20 crops; host nematodes include Belonolaimus longicaudatus, Heterodera spp., Meloidogyne spp., and Xiphinema diversicaudatum. Pasteuria penetrans plays an important role in some suppressive soils. The efficacy of the bacterium as a biological control agent has been examined. Approximately 100,000 endospores/g of soil provided immediate control of the peanut root-knot nematode, whereas 1,000 and 5,000 endospores/g of soil each amplified in the host nematode and became suppressive after 3 years.
TL;DR: A simple test was used to determine whether or not Pasteuria penetrans spores would attach to 17 species of nematodes and when juveniles encumbered with the same number of spores from two populations were added to soil there were differences in the numbers of females that became infected.
Abstract: SUMMARY
A simple test was used to determine whether or not Pasteuria penetrans spores would attach to 17 species of nematodes. All susceptible individuals had spores attached to their cuticles after 24 h of gentle agitation in suspensions containing 105spores/ml. Spores of P. penetrans from six populations of Meloidogyne only adhered to species of Meloidogyne and they adhered in greatest numbers to the species from which they had been originally isolated. Sonication of spores from infected females increased attachment but the effect was dependent on pH and whether the test was conducted in tap or distilled water. Invasion of tomato roots was reduced by up to 86% when, rather than using healthy juveniles, second-stage juveniles bearing 15 or more spores were added to soil at high densities (1000 or 3000/plant); at low densities (500/plant) invasion was not significantly affected. The rate of development of M. incognita juveniles infected with P. penetrans was slower than that of healthy juveniles. The numbers of second-generation of M. incognita were reduced by 82–93% when juveniles encumbered with 1–15 spores were added to soil instead of those bearing no spores. Pasteuria penetrans populations differed in their aggressiveness and when juveniles encumbered with the same number of spores from two populations were added to soil there were differences in the numbers of females that became infected. The implications of these results for the development of P. penetrans as a biological control agent are discussed.