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1.
In a long-term field experiment, differential population densities of Heterodera avenae were produced by frequent cropping with resistant (cv. Panema) or susceptible (cv. Peniarth) oat. The two oat cultivars were equally good hosts of Pratylenchus neglectus in a glass house experiment with field soil. On wheat crops grown after oats in field experiments, P. neglectus population densities in roots were higher in plots where H. avenae had been controlled than in plots with moderate infestations (40 H. avenae eggs/g soil). The field observations indicated that the reduction in population densities of P. neglectus coincided with the development in roots of sedentary stages of the cyst nematode. Evidence for an indirect effect of H. avenae on P. neglectus was found in vitro in a split-root experiment. In the same field, grain yields of two wheat cultivars susceptible or resistant to H. avenae, but both susceptible to P. neglectus, was not reduced by P. neglectus. Alternation of H. avenae resistant and susceptible cultivars is a possible way of exploiting the inverse relationship between these nematodes, whilst controlling cyst nematode -populations in intensive cereal production systems.  相似文献   

2.
In a replicated field experiment mean yields of wheat from plots that, in the preceding 2 years, had carried oats, beans or potatoes were 39.2 and 42.6 cwt. per acre in 1954 for Holdfast and Cappelle, respectively; 42.8 and 55.8 in 1955 and 34.9 and 49.6 in 1956. Previous wheat crops had more effect than any other treatment in increasing the incidence of eyespot, take-all and weeds and in decreasing the number of ears per unit area and the yield of grain. In 1956 on plots carrying the first, second and third successive wheat crops the percentages of straws with eyespot were respectively 12, 54 and 42 and with take-all 0.1, 1 and 16. Cappelle was less severely infected by eyespot than Holdfast. The second and third successive wheat crops yielded an average of 23.3 cwt./acre less than the first wheat crop. Cappelle consistently yielded more than Holdfast, the mean difference being 13.8 cwt./acre after potatoes but only 3.8 cwt./acre after two wheat crops. The higher seed-rate gave an average increase in grain yield of 3.3 cwt./acre; but where eyespot and take-all were both severe the lower seed-rate yielded as much total and more dressed grain than the higher. Wheat given a spring top dressing of 6 cwt./acre Nitro-Chalk yielded an average of 4 cwt./acre more grain than wheat given 3 cwt./acre.  相似文献   

3.
The yield of wheat and the incidence of take-all were measured in crops grown in six different 4-year sequences, repeated in 3 successive years. The first crop of winter wheat grown after oats or beans yielded 13–23 cwt/acre (1632–2887 kg/ha) more grain than wheat after wheat or barley. Spring wheat after oats yielded 2–5 cwt/acre (250–625 kg/ha) more than spring wheat after wheat. The smaller yields of wheat after wheat or barley were caused mostly by greater prevalence of take-all. Regression analysis indicates that each 1 % increase in straws with take-all decreased yield of winter wheat by 0·6%. Take-all was more prevalent in the second and third successive wheat crops after oats than in the fourth crop.  相似文献   

4.
Aldicarb at 1.5 or 4.5 kg ha-1 applied around the seeds at sowing greatly increased the yields of a range of crop plants in soil heavily infested with stem nematode (Ditylenchus dipsaci, ‘oat race’). Yield responses could be largely explained by stem nematode control in onions, field beans, peas, Manod oats and maize but not in wheat, Maris Tabard oats, lucerne or sugar beet. Aldicarb lessened stem nematode attacks and lessened stem nematode increase in host plants. The supposedly resistant oat Manod was susceptible, whereas Maris Tabard was resistant, as were Peniarth, Pennal, Panema, Pennant, Maris Quest and Milford, whose resistances derive from Grey Winter. Maris Tabard outyielded resistant Panema, Peniarth and Pennal and susceptible Maris Osprey and Manod on infested soil. ‘Tulip root’ is not an infallible guide to susceptibility of oats to stem nematode. We advocate using a mixture of nematode populations in breeding for resistance to stem nematodes.  相似文献   

5.
Terminated small grain cover crops are valuable in light textured soils to reduce wind and rain erosion and for protection of young cotton seedlings. A three-year study was conducted to determine the impact of terminated small grain winter cover crops, which are hosts for Meloidogyne incognita, on cotton yield, root galling and nematode midseason population density. The small plot test consisted of the cover treatment as the main plots (winter fallow, oats, rye and wheat) and rate of aldicarb applied in-furrow at-plant (0, 0.59 and 0.84 kg a.i./ha) as subplots in a split-plot design with eight replications, arranged in a randomized complete block design. Roots of 10 cotton plants per plot were examined at approximately 35 days after planting. Root galling was affected by aldicarb rate (9.1, 3.8 and 3.4 galls/root system for 0, 0.59 and 0.84 kg aldicarb/ha), but not by cover crop. Soil samples were collected in mid-July and assayed for nematodes. The winter fallow plots had a lower density of M. incognita second-stage juveniles (J2) (transformed to Log10 (J2 + 1)/500 cm3 soil) than any of the cover crops (0.88, 1.58, 1.67 and 1.75 Log10(J2 + 1)/500 cm3 soil for winter fallow, oats, rye and wheat, respectively). There were also fewer M. incognita eggs at midseason in the winter fallow (3,512, 7,953, 8,262 and 11,392 eggs/500 cm3 soil for winter fallow, oats, rye and wheat, respectively). Yield (kg lint per ha) was increased by application of aldicarb (1,544, 1,710 and 1,697 for 0, 0.59 and 0.84 kg aldicarb/ha), but not by any cover crop treatments. These results were consistent over three years. The soil temperature at 15 cm depth, from when soils reached 18°C to termination of the grass cover crop, averaged 9,588, 7,274 and 1,639 centigrade hours (with a minimum threshold of 10°C), in 2005, 2006 and 2007, respectively. Under these conditions, potential reproduction of M. incognita on the cover crop did not result in a yield penalty.  相似文献   

6.
Wheat, cotton, and peanut were arranged in three cropping sequences to determine the effects of fenamiphos (6.7 kg a.i./ha) and cropping sequence on nematode population densities and crop yields under conservation tillage and irrigation for 6 years. The cropping sequences included a wheat winter cover crop each year and summer crops of cotton every year, peanut every year, or cotton rotated every other year with peanut. The population densities of Meloidogyne spp. and Helicotylenchus dihystera were determined monthly during the experiment. Numbers of M. incognita increased on cotton and decreased on peanut, whereas M. arenaria increased on peanut, and decreased on cotton; both nematode species remained in moderate to high numbers in plots of wheat. Root damage was more severe on cotton than peanut and was not affected by fenamiphos treatment. The H. dihystera population densities were highest in plots with cotton every summer, intermediate in the cotton-peanut rotation, and lowest in plots with peanut every summer. Over all years and cropping sequences, yield increases in fenamiphos treatment over untreated control were 9% for wheat, 8% for cotton, and 0% for peanut. Peanut yields following cotton were generally higher than yields following peanut. These results show that nematode problems may be manageable in cotton and peanut production under conservation tillage and irrigation in the southeastern United States.  相似文献   

7.
Management of Meloidogyne incognita on soybean as affected by winter small grain crops or fallow, two tillage systems, and nematicides was studied. Numbers of M. incognita did not differ in plots planted to wheat and rye. Yields of soybean planted after these crops also did not differ. Numbers of M. incognita were greater in fallow than in rye plots, but soybean yield was not affected by the two treatments. Soybean yields were greater in subsoil-plant than in moldboard plowed plots. Ethylene dibromide reduced nematode population densities more consistently than aldicarb and phenamiphos. Also, ethylene dibromide increased yields the most and phenamiphos the least. There was a positive correlation (P = 0.001) of seed size (weight of 100 seeds) with yield (r = 0.79), indicating that factors affecting yield also affected seed size.  相似文献   

8.
Population changes of Heterodera avenae and crop growth in a sandy loam soil were studied from 1974 until 1978; the nematode decreased plant growth but failed in two of the years to multiply on susceptible hosts. Spring oats were the most heavily invaded cereal and produced the smallest shoots. Second-stage juveniles invaded cereal roots in decreasing numbers: spring oats > autumn oats > spring barley > spring wheat > autumn barley > autumn wheat. Numbers of females developing on the different cultivars were in a similar order. Most females developed on roots in 1976 despite poor crop growth in the severe drought. Numbers of H. avenae in soil treated with oxamyl (Vydate) at 8.8 kg/ha a. i. were less in all years except 1975. In the dry winter and spring of 1975/76 nematode multiplication was prevented in soil treated with oxamyl before drilling in the autumn. In all years large numbers of females were produced on the roots of all cultivars but in 1975 and 1978 nematode populations declined because few females survived to form cysts containing eggs and their fecundity was reduced. Numbers of cysts after harvest were not affected by formalin (38% formaldehyde) applied as a drench at 3000 litres/ha in 1977 but fecundity doubled in treated soil, and nematode multiplication increased from 3.8 × in untreated plots to 18.6 ×. When the plots were irrigated in 1978 numbers of cysts and fecundity increased in formalin treated soil resulting in an increase in multiplication from 0.3 × to 14.6 ×. Fungal parasites attacking H. avenae females and eggs are considered responsible for the poor multiplication of the nematode.  相似文献   

9.
In the autumn of 1953 an experiment was begun to follow changes in the cereal-root eelworm population of small plots on a field in Shropshire. The plots were cropped with either oats, wheat, barley or rye, sown in the autumn and spring, and some plots had fertilizer. Each plot received the same treatment for 3 years; in the fourth year an indicator crop of spring oats was grown on all the plots.
Under rye and autumn-sown wheat the eelworm population fell to a level which permitted a good oat crop in 1957. Autumn-sown wheat, barley and rye generally produced lower eelworm populations than their spring-sown counterparts, but autumn-sown oats proved to be the most efficient host. The order of host efficiency was oats (best), barley, wheat, rye. The eelworm populations were generally higher on plots receiving fertilizer treatment. In this experiment all oat plots, and spring-sown barley plus fertilizer, produced populations which severely damaged the 1957 oat crop.  相似文献   

10.
Annual patterns of mildew on winter and spring barley, wheat and oats at NIAB trial sites for 1958-68 are reported. High intensities of mildew were preceded by early infections, particularly at sites where both winter and spring crops were infected early. Relative earliness and severity of infections in all six crops of cereals were generally similar at any site. This pattern was repeated within denned mildew ‘regions’, i.e. north, east and west. Sprowston (Norfolk) was atypical of the eastern sites, showing patterns of mildew infection more characteristic of sites in the west, where mildew values were 50 % higher than elsewhere. Dates of first visible infection became later further eastwards and northwards, particularly in winter cereals. This suggested the possibility of dispersal of inoculum by prevailing winds to the north, north-east and east, or a similar progression in climatic factors favourable to mildew development. Estimates of loss of potential yield in the trial plots of sites in each region and over the whole country were calculated for winter wheat, spring barley and spring oats using the formulae of Large and Doling, for which supplementary confirmation was provided.  相似文献   

11.
Three field experiments made during 1975-77, in North and South Yorkshire, investigated the influence of 'large form' Longidorus leptocephalus upon the yield of spring barley, winter wheat and second early potatoes.
Longidorus populations ranged from undetectable levels to 2375/litre soil. At one site estimates of nematode numbers were made twice, and gave a close agreement between the ranking order of plots. Significant negative correlations between numbers of L. leptocephalus and yield suggested that this nematode impaired the yield of these crops. For each 200 LongidoruslX of soil the estimated reductions in yield were 0–25 t/ha of barley, 0–13 t/ha of wheat and 0–55 t/ha of potatoes.  相似文献   

12.
Weed populations were studied from a 26-year-old field experiment in southern Sweden with three different 6-year crop rotations, each with four rates of nitrogen application. The rotations differed in that one had a two-year legume-grass ley, another had a two-year grass ley, and that the third had spring wheat followed by a repeatedly harrowed fallow. The leys and the fallow were followed by turnip rape, winter wheat, oats and barley which was undersown in the two ley rotations. Data on weed biomass, collected in one season, were subjected to multivariate analysis.
Winter turnip rape had the highest weed biomass. However, of the several weed species, only Matricaria perforata Merat was important in wheat (the crop following turnip rape in the rotation). The weed flora did not differ consistently between rotations. We conclude that none of the three rotations had developed any major weed problems under the past weed management regime (herbicides applied to cereal crops).
There was no consistent effect of nitrogen fertilisation on total weed biomass in any of the three rotations. However, when comparing the weed floras in winter wheat, turnip rape and oats, the unfertilised plots differed from the plots receiving nitrogen. In the two latter crops, the abundant, low-growing annual Stellaria media (L.) Vil. performed best in fertilised plots with dense stands. Equisetum arvense L., the most abundant perennial weed, was important only in unfertilised plots.  相似文献   

13.
Effects of long-term barley monoculture on plant-affecting soil microbiota   总被引:1,自引:1,他引:0  
Effects of soil microbiota on shoot and root growth of barley were tested in a greenhouse tube-growing system. Tubes were filled with a mixture of pure sand and various percentages of soils sampled from plots in three long-term field experiments measuring effects of various crop rotations on yield. Using 3% soil in the sand-soil mixture, shoot dry weight of barley test plants was reduced by about 35% and root depth by about 40% in soils from monoculture plots as compared to soils from crop-rotation plots. Typical root symptoms on poorly growing barley plants started as distinct dark-brown zones which then rapidly spread over the whole root system until the root tips ceased to grow. As tested in one experiment, the barley monoculture soil also affected wheat and oats, but to a lesser degree than it did barley. Most of the depressing effects of monoculture soil on barley were eliminated when soil samples were treated with metalaxyl or heated to 65°C for 2 hours. A Pythium sp. frequently isolated from barley roots showing typical symptoms affected barley, wheat and oats in the same way as did barley monoculture soil.  相似文献   

14.
Meloidogyne incognita causes more damage to cotton in the US than any other pathogen. The objective of this study was to document the cumulative effect of moderate resistance on M. incognita population density, root galling, and yield suppression in the southern United States on a moderately resistant cotton genotype grown continuously for three years. Cotton genotypes were Phytogen PH98-3196 (77% suppression of M. incognita), Acala NemX (85% suppression of M. incognita), and Delta and Pine Land DP458 B/R (susceptible standard, 0% suppression). Cotton was grown in fumigated and non-fumigated plots to measure yield loss. Each genotype and nematicide combination was planted in the same place for three years at two sites to document cumulative effects. In 2006, following three years of the different genotypes, all plots at one site were planted with susceptible cotton to document residual effects of planting resistant genotypes. Root galling and nematode population densities in the soil were significantly lower, and percentage yield suppression was numerically lower, when moderately resistant cotton was grown compared to the susceptible standard in both fields in all three years. Differences between susceptible and moderately resistant genotypes are established quickly (after only one season) and then either maintained at similar levels or slightly increased in subsequent years depending on initial nematode levels. However, when susceptible cotton was grown following three years of the moderately resistant genotypes, the nematode suppression provided by moderate resistance was undetectable by the end of the first season. Moderately resistant cotton genotypes are more beneficial than previously reported and should be pursued for nematode management. Rotation of moderately resistant and susceptible cotton could be used along with nematicides to manage root-knot nematodes in a continuous cotton cropping system and reduce selection pressure on the nematodes.  相似文献   

15.
Grain yields were measured over 2 seasons from a range of field crops following liming and deep ripping an acid and compacted soil in north-eastern Victoria. Lime (2.5 t ha–1) substantially reduced the level of exchangeable Al and exchangeable Mn whilst raising soil pH by about 1.0 unit. The crops grown were 7 cultivars of wheat and one cultivar each of triticale, oats, barley, rapeseed, safflower, field pea, chick pea and lupins. With the exception of lupin, liming the soil increased (p=0.05) the grain yield of all crops and cultivars. With the wheat cultivars there were 2 distinct groups with different tolerance to soil acidity. Wheat, oats, triticale and lupins had higher absolute yields than the other crops. Safflower and chick pea had very low yields without soil amendment. The magnitude of the lime response did not differ between the wheat cultivars (17%) or between any of the crop species (range 9–29%). Deep ripping the soil to break a hard compacted layer resulted in more yield for all the cereals and safflower. The results demonstrate the importance of using crops with tolerance to acid soil conditions as well as gains that can be obtained with ameliorating identifiable soil problems.  相似文献   

16.
The effects of stem nematode (Ditylenchus dipsaci) infestation on the establishment of white clover sown in mixed swards with perennial ryegrass, were investigated in two field trials. Clover cultivars known to have different degrees of resistance were sown on land in which stem nematode was controlled either by aldicarb (Experiment 1) or crop rotation (Experiment 2). The establishment of white clover was greatly improved and subsequent clover yields were inversely related to stem nematode infestation. At the first harvest after sowing, clover yields were 3.6 and 3.3 times greater from aldicarb and rotation treatment plots than from check plots; over the first nine months, total clover yields were increased by 3.5 and 8.9 times by aldicarb and rotation treatments. In both trials, plots of resistant cultivars had less stem nematode infestation and yielded better than the very susceptible cultivar, S184. Stem nematode infestations eventually developed on all plots, after the establishment phase. This is the first report showing that resistant cultivars improve establishment of clover in mixed swards on stem nematode infested soils. In both experiments, plots became dominated by clover and even cv. S184 eventually produced good clover swards. Aldicarb and rotation treatments also controlled clover cyst and root lesion nematodes, and numbers of these were inversely related to first harvest yields. Other soil borne pests and diseases, although not prominent, have not been ruled out as possible confounding factors. There was no correlation between grass yield and aldicarb treatment.  相似文献   

17.
The level of resistance to root-knot nematode, Meloidogyne incognita, in NemX, a new cultivar of the Acala-type upland cotton, was evaluated in relation to four resistant breeding lines (N6072, N8577, N901, and N903) and four susceptible cultivars (Maxxa, SJ2, Royale, and Prema). In growth pouch tests, an average of only 4 nematode egg masses was produced on roots of NemX or the resistant lines, compared to a significantly higher average of 21 on the susceptible cultivars. In pot tests, the nematode reproduction factor (RF = Pf/Pi) in NemX and the resistant lines averaged 0.7, compared to a significantly higher average of 10 on the susceptible cultivars. Root galling in NemX or other resistant cotton averaged 15%, compared to 74% on the susceptible cultivars, in either pot or field tests. In plots with low levels of nematode infestation (Pi ≤ 150 second-stage juveniles [J2]/500 g soil), lint yield of NemX averaged 1,370 kg/ha and was less than the yield of susceptible Maxxa (1,450 k g /h a ). However, in plots with medium or high levels of nematode infestation (Pi = 151-300 or >300 J2/500 g soil, respectively), yields of NemX decreased only slightly and averaged 1,300 or 1,050 kg/ha, respectively, whereas yields of Maxxa were severely reduced to 590 or 503 kg/ha, respectively. Fusarium wih symptoms were observed on both NemX and Maxxa, and percent occurrence increased with increasing preplant nematode density. In plots with the highest nematode densities, 22% of NemX and 65% of Maxxa plants were wilted. NemX was highly effective against five M. incognita isolates and moderately effective against a sixth isolate that had been exposed to resistant cotton over several seasons. These results showed that NemX is as resistant to M. incognita as the four breeding lines, and much more resistant than the tested susceptible cultivars of cotton.  相似文献   

18.
Two bulk populations of spring barley lines differing in respect of a single dominant gene for cereal cyst nematode (Heterodera avenae) resistance were used in trials over 4 years to assess the effect of the nematode on grain yield. On an infested site the resistant lines consistently and significantly out-yielded the susceptible lines by an average of 9 % over the 4 years. On non-infested sites, there was no difference in yield between the resistant and susceptible lines. To measure changes in the cereal cyst nematode population under continuous barley cultivation, the resistant and susceptible lines were each sown at the infested site on the same plots for 4 consecutive years. The cereal cyst nematode population declined under both susceptible and resistant barley, but more rapidly under the latter. Migratory nematodes, mostly Pratylenchus minyus, were latterly prevalent on all plots. There was no detectable change in the pathogenicity of the cereal cyst nematode population after 3 years of growing resistant barley.  相似文献   

19.
In two concurrent field experiments, the effects of three types of soil cultivation and two patterns of nematode application were studied in order to investigate their effects on damage to winter wheat by slugs (assessed at Zadoks Growth Stage 12). In experiment 1, infective juveniles (IJs) of the nematode Phasmarhabditis hermaphrodita were applied to soil as an overall spray or as a band spray (8-cm wide), centred on the drill rows (16.7-cm apart). Nematodes were either left undisturbed on the soil surface or harrowed into the soil immediately after application. The control provided by nematodes was compared with that provided by metaldehyde and methiocarb pellets broadcast at the recommended rate immediately after drilling. In this experiment, winter wheat on plots treated with IJs showed significantly less slug damage than on wheat plots treated with metaldehyde or methiocarb pellets or untreated plots. There was no significant difference in plant damage between plots treated with band and overall spray applications of IJs, nor was there any significant difference between plots with and without harrowing. There was also no significant difference between untreated plots and plots treated with metaldehyde or methiocarb pellets, probably because rainfall shortly after treatment rendered the pellets ineffective. In experiment 2, nematodes were applied as an overall spray or plots were not treated with nematodes before soil was cultivated with tines, Roterra or Dutzi cultivators. Nematode application before soil cultivation using tines or Roterra reduced the number of plants damaged significantly. However, nematodes applied before Dutzi cultivation appeared to be rendered ineffective. Damage to winter wheat was lowest in plots that had been sprayed with nematodes and subsequently cultivated with tines or Roterra.  相似文献   

20.
Plant-nematode populations associated with uncultivated vegetation, adjacent strawberry plants, and alternate crop sites were studied at three locations in Minnesota. At one site (Forest Lake), Paratylenchus projectus, Meloidogyne hapla, and Pratylenchus tenuis were frequently associated with the roots of native vegetation. These nematode species were also present in adjacent strawberry beds. Among alternate crops observed, oats and muskmelon usually supported the fewest nematodes although moderate densities of Xiphinema americanum and P. tenuis were found at one location in plots planted to oats. Pratylenchus tenuis was also found on rye at one location.  相似文献   

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