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1.
Applied to potato ridge soil in spring, before potatoes were planted, small amounts of aldicarb (10-3 kg/ha or less) controlled potato cyst-nematodes (Heterodera rostochiensis Woll.) better than large amounts of dazomet (110–466 kg/ha) or D-D (102–439 kg/ha). Applied in spring 1968 and 1969 to heavily infested sandy clay soil 466 kg dazomet/ha allowed Majestic potatoes to grow and yield well in both years without increasing the number of nematodes in the soil after harvest, but in peaty loam dazomet was toxic to potato plants and, when applied in autumn, killed fewer nematodes. D-D in potato ridges in spring controlled nematodes less well than dazomet or aldicarb, but 896 kg D-D/ha injected in sandy clay soil in autumn increased potato yield the following year without increasing the number of nematodes after harvest.  相似文献   

2.
Dazomet applied in the ridges in autumn or in spring, before potatoes were planted in them, controlled potato cyst-nematode (Heterodera rostochiensis), British pathotype A, better in sandy loam and peaty loam than Telone (1,3-dichloropropene mixture). In sandy loam dazomet controlled potato cyst-nematode as well when applied in spring as when applied in autumn and as well when the soil was ridged after treatment as when it was not. Telone was as effective when applied to ridges in autumn as when applied to ridges in spring. In peaty loam potato cyst-nematodes were least abundant after a crop of Maris Piper potatoes. The yields of King Edward potatoes were greatly increased and nematode multiplication was greatly reduced by dazomet incorporated in the ridges in autumn. Two equal doses of dazomet, one incorporated in the topsoil before, the other after ploughing, controlled potato cyst-nematode as well and increased the yield of King Edward potatoes more than an equivalent amount of dazomet applied after ploughing. Dazomet applied to silt loam soil in two dressings, one before, the other after, ploughing, controlled potato cyst-nematode better than an equal amount applied as a single dressing after ploughing. The nematode was controlled best by two large dressings of dazomet or by a combined treatment of dazomet and Telone.  相似文献   

3.
Large amounts of dazomet (329, 439 kg/ha) applied to potato ridge soil in spring, before potatoes were planted, controlled potato cyst-nematode (Heterodera rostochiensis) in sandy loam and silt loam more effectively than large amounts of D-D (359, 448 kg/ha). In heavily infested sandy loam, 329 kg dazomet/ha or 857 kg methyl bromide/ha applied in spring 1969 or 439 kg dazomet/ha applied in autumn 1968, greatly decreased the number of larvae able to invade potato roots, so Majestic potatoes grew and yielded well without increasing the number of nematodes left in the soil after harvest. Large amounts of D-D or Telone applied to the topsoil in autumn or to the ridges in spring were less effective in controlling potato cyst-nematode or increasing potato yields. Applied in spring 1969 to silt loam ridges, 439 kg dazomet/ha had more effect than 448 kg D-D/ha on potato cyst-nematode and on the increase in yield of Majestic potato. The yield of Maris Piper potatoes (resistant to H. rostochiensis pathotype A) in infested silt loam was increased greatly by D-D, as much by 112 as by 224 or 448 kg/ha.  相似文献   

4.
Incorporating either Du Pont 1410 or Nemacur P at 11-2 kg a.i./ha in peaty loam topsoil in Spring, controlled potato cyst-nematodes (Heterodera rostochiensis) to 20 cm deep as well as did 5.6 kg incorporated in Winter before ploughing followed by another dose of 5.6 kg incorporated in the seedbed in Spring. In pots Du Pont 1410 remained effective after several months incubation in soil at 5 or 10 oC. Dazomet at 440 kg/ha incorporated in the topsoil in Winter (220 kg before ploughing and 220 kg after ploughing) did not control the nematodes as consistently as 5.6 or 11.2 kg a.i./ha of Du Pont 141 o or Nemacur P, even when the dazomet-treated plots were covered with Polythene sheeting to prolong fumigation. In large containers, aldicarb at 45 mg a.i./13 l soil increased the yield of Arran Banner potatoes as much when incorporated to 13 cm deep in moderately infested peaty loam as when incorporated to 25 or 38 cm deep, but not as much as when all the soil (to 51 cm deep) was treated. Treating the soil to 13 cm deep did not control the nematodes 13–25 cm deep even though some of the nematicide was probably leached into this layer. In field plots, the nematodes were better controlled when Du Pont 1410 or Dowco 275 was rotavated into the top 10 cm than into the top 20 cm of a peaty loam soil. Rotavating soil twice instead of once after applying aldicarb, Du Pont 1410 or Dowco 275 to the soil surface did not increase nematode control. Although small amounts of aldicarb incorporated into the topsoil in Spring controlled the nematodes, the same amounts concentrated in the seed furrows, just before susceptible potatoes were planted in them, did not.  相似文献   

5.
Two populations, Duddingston and Feltwell, of potato cyst-nematode were inbred for seven and six generations respectively. The Duddingston population maintained a high fecundity in some lines for three generations, but in subsequent generations the fecundity as measured by cyst production declined in spite of selection for high fecundity. By selecting for fecundity, some lines of the Feltwell population still produced many cysts after five generations of inbreeding. In the Duddingston population it was possible to increase the number of cysts produced by an inbred line of poor fecundity by using paired cysts plus selection for fecundity. A similar change may have been obtained for unprolific lines of the Feltwell population. Selection for production of few cysts quickly produced lines with poor fecundity. One cause of poor fecundity was the small number of larvae in cysts used for inoculations. Yellow eggs were found in large numbers in some cysts but these were not a cause of loss of fecundity following repeated inbreeding.  相似文献   

6.
Applying 5 ml of a 38% aqueous solution of formaldehyde to 1500 ml of sandy loam prevented potato cyst-nematode, Heterodera rostochiensis, from increasing on the roots of Arran Banner potatoes planted in the soil and increased the weight of tubers produced. A comparable dosage applied to plots of sandy loam and sandy clay in winter did not prevent the nematode from multiplying on Pentland Crown potatoes but increased tuber yields. Smaller amounts of formalin had less effect on tuber yields and drenching dilute formalin solutions onto the soil was no more effective than incorporating undiluted formalin into the soil by rotavation 15 cm deep.  相似文献   

7.
In peaty loam soils, aldicarb or oxamyl mixed with the top 15 cm of the soil in spring before sugar beet seeds were sown, minimised invasion of the roots by larvae of the beet cyst-nematode, Heterodera schachtii, so preventing injury to the seedlings, and greatly increased sugar yields in heavily infested soil. Small amounts of both compounds were often as effective as larger amounts. Nematode increase on sugar beet roots was slow. Aldicarb or oxamyl lessened nematode increase in four years out of five. Fumigating predetermined row positions with dichloropropene mixtures (D-D, Telone) or incorporating aldicarb or methomyl shallowly in soil, later occupied by the roots of sugar beet seedlings, did not control the nematode, although sugar yields were sometimes increased.  相似文献   

8.
Of 444 compounds tested for their ability to stimulate eggs of Heterodera rostochiensis to hatch, forty-five did so to varying extents. Many compounds that hatched H. schachtii Schm. eggs did not hatch H. rostochiensis eggs. The most effective compounds with H. rostochiensis were picrolonic acid, anhydro-tetronic acid and vanadates. Tests with analogues of picrolonic and anhydro-tetronic acids suggested some structures that may be concerned in hatching H. rostochiensis and H. schachtii. The simple analogues hatched the eggs of H. schachtii but not those of H. rostochiensis. Suitably placed polarisable atoms seemed to be an essential feature. Picrolonic acid contains pairs of polarizable atoms, about 4 and 6·7 Å apart, that may respectively be associated with the hatching of H. schachtii and H. rostochiensis. Other features of the more active hatching agents were a cis and co-planar arrangement of the two polarizable atoms with respect to the rest of the molecule. The function of hatching agents is discussed.  相似文献   

9.
Small amounts (5.6 or n-2 kg a.i./ha) of aldicarb or oxamyl, incorporated in the soil before potatoes were planted in spring, controlled potato cyst-nematodes (Heterodera rostochiensis and H. pallida) on susceptible cultivars equally well in sandy, peaty and silt loam soils. In soils treated with either nematicide, nematode numbers increased little or decreased; in untreated soils nematode numbers increased greatly. In contrast organophosphate nematicides, similarly applied, fenamiphos (proposed BSI common name for O-ethyl-O-(3-methyl-4-methylthiophenyI)-isopropylamido-phosphate), ethoprophos (proposed BSI common name for (O-ethyl S, 5-dipropyl phos-phorodithioate), CGA 12223 (O, O-diethyl O-[i-isopropyl-5-chloro-i,2,4-triazoIyl-(3)] phosphorothioate) and Dowco 275 (O, O-diethyl O-(6-fluoro-2 pyridyl) phosphorothioate), were ineffective at one or more of the experimental sites. Potato yields were greatly increased by oximecarbamate or organophosphate nematicides only in soils heavily infested with the nematodes.  相似文献   

10.
Aldicarb or Du Pont 1410 (S-methyl 1-(dimethylcarbamoyl)-N-[(methylcarbamoyl) oxy] thioformimidate) at 2.6–11.2 kg a.i./ha applied to the soil at planting time controlled potato cyst-nematode, Heterodera rostochiensis, in sandy loam, peaty loam and silt loam and greatly increased tuber yields of susceptible potatoes. Nemacur (O-ethyl-O-(3-methyl-4-methylthiophenyl) isopropylamido-phosphate) controlled potato cyst-nematode in sandy loam at 2.9–10.3 kg a.i./ha and in silt loam at 11.2 kg a.i./ha but did not control the nematode well in peaty loam even at 22.4 kg a.i./ha. In peaty loam aldicarb and Nemacur were more effectively incorporated by rotavation than by a modified power harrow.  相似文献   

11.
In sandy loam infested with golden potato cyst-nematode, Globodera rostochiensis, oxamyl at 5.6 kg a.i. ha-1 incorporated in the top 15 cm of the soil just before planting potatoes greatly reduced nematode population increase on susceptible cv. Désirée grown six, seven or eight years after the last susceptible potato crop, but did not significantly increase tuber yields. In four-course and two-course rotations, oxamyl also controlled increase of G. rostochiensis and greatly increased yields of both cv. Désirée and resistant cv. Maris Piper. Oxamyl maintained tuber yields in a four-course rotation at the same level as in a six to eight-course rotation. Decline of G. rostochiensis in the soil was much faster under barley in some two-course rotations than under barley in four-course rotations.  相似文献   

12.
Incorporated in silt or peat loam top-soil in spring before susceptible potatoes were planted, three carbamoyl oximes, aldicarb, Tirpate (2,4-dimethyl-2-formyl 1-1,3-dithiolane oxime iV-methylcarbamate) and Du Pont 1410 (S-methyl i-(dimethylcarbamoyl)-N-((methylcarbamoyl) oxy) thioformimidate) and one organophosphate, Nemacur (O-ethyl-O-(3-methyl-4-methylthiophenyl)-isopropylamidophosphate) all at n-2 kg a.i./ha greatly increased the yield of tubers and effectively controlled potato cyst-nematode (Heterodera rostochiensis Woll.). At the same dosage thionazin was as effective in the peat loam but was ineffective in the silt loam; phorate and Mocap (O-ethyl S,S-dipropyl phosphorodithioate) were less effective and chlorfenvinphos, diazinon and a coarse granule formulation of fensulphothion were ineffective in controlling potato cyst-nematode.  相似文献   

13.
Forty-eight lines of Lycopersicon and four lines of Solanum were screened for resistance to twelve Heterodera rostochiensis populations of known patho-type(s). Plant lines were assessed for resistance first by examining the outside of the root ball for cysts and later by washing the root ball to extract all cysts. Possible resistant plant selections were re-tested against three eelworm populations, including the one to which they were first shown resistant. Resistance was discovered in two lines of Lycopersicon pimpinelli-folium, two L. esculentum L. pimpinellifolium crosses, L. esculentum var. cerasiforme, six lines of L. peruvianum, in L. peruvianum var. humifusum, L. hirsutum var. glabratum, and in Solanum indicum. Because resistance was found most commonly in L. peruvianum and because it has already been used as a resistant parent in breeding programmes to incorporate resistance to root-knot nematode (Meloidogyne spp.) in tomato, L. peruvianum seems to be the best source of resistance among plants tested so far. The host-parasite relationships of resistant L. hirsutum var. glabratum (B 6013) were compared with those of a commercial, susceptible tomato, L. esculentum‘Ailsa Craig’. Plants were inoculated with three eelworm isolates; the extent of eelworm invasion, plant reaction and eelworm development were studied. Larvae invaded and penetrated roots of the resistant plant as freely and in as large numbers as they penetrated roots of the susceptible tomato. In the latter, numerous larvae matured while, in contrast, few larvae matured in the roots of L. hirsutum var. glabratum. L. hirsutum var. glabratum was shown to possess a root diffusate as active in hatching larvae of Heterodera rostochiensis as that of L. esculentum‘Ailsa Craig’. The existence of pathotypes of H. rostochiensis, identifiable by their differing abilities to increase on resistant tomato lines, was not clearly revealed in the experiments.  相似文献   

14.
1. Cyst walls of the potato cyst-nematode (Heterodera rostochiensis Woll.) were isolated by sieving a suspension of crushed cysts. About 12mg. of dried cyst walls was obtained from 1000 cysts. 2. The cyst walls contained mainly protein (72%, calculated from nitrogen content). On acid hydrolysis about 77% of the cyst wall went into solution. Of 19 amino acids present, proline, glycine, and alanine were the most abundant, and made up about 50% by weight of the total amino acids. The amino acid composition suggested that collagen-like proteins predominated in the cyst wall and larval cuticle. 3. A small amount of glucosamine (1.5%) was present in the hydrolysates, but chitin was not detected in the cyst walls. 4. Other components of the cyst walls were lipid (2%), carbohydrate (0.5%) and a small amount of inorganic matter (ash, 5%). Polyphenols (2% by wt. of the cyst walls) occurred in the acid hydrolysates. The dark pigments of the cyst wall were not indole-containing melanins.  相似文献   

15.
Small, sprouted tubers of potatoes (cv. Pentland Crown) grown for 6 wk and then pulled out of soil infested with potato cyst-nematode, Globodera rostochiensis Roi, increased the hatch of larvae, so that 100 days after planting the top 20 cm of the soil contained only one third of the original number of eggs. The artificial hatching agent picrolonic acid alone at 8-6, 17*2 or 34-4 kg/ha rotavated into the soil did not increase hatch but 17*2 kg, incorporated in the soil after potatoes grown for 4 wk, did.  相似文献   

16.
1. Eggs of the potato cyst-nematode (Heterodera rostochiensis Woll.) were isolated by sieving a suspension of crushed cysts. Eggs were broken open by ultrasonic vibration and the egg shells separated from the released larvae by centrifuging in a potassium tartrate density gradient. About 1 mg. of dried egg shells was obtained from 1000 cysts. 2. The major constituent of the egg shells was protein (59%, calculated from nitrogen content). About 80% of the egg shells went into solution on acid hydrolysis. Of the 18 amino acids determined with the Technicon Auto-Analyser, proline was most abundant and, with aspartic acid, glycine and serine, made up about 64% by weight of the total amino acids. The small amounts of aromatic and sulphur-containing amino acids, and the presence of hydroxy-proline, indicate a collagen-like protein. 3. The egg shells gave a positive van Wisselingh colour test for chitin, and glucosamine was detected in their acid hydrolysate by chromatography. The glucosamine content of the egg shells, determined by the Elson-Morgan colorimetric method, was 7%, corresponding to about 9% chitin. 4. Dried egg shells contained about 7% of lipid, 6% of carbohydrate and 3% of ash. Polyphenols (3% by weight of the egg shells) were detected in the acid hydrolysates. 5. Neither the collagen nor the chitin showed evidence of crystallinity when examined by X-ray diffraction.  相似文献   

17.
As little as 0.8 kg aldicarb ha-1 applied to bands of soil 15 cm wide × 15 cm deep, in which sugar beet seeds were sown, increased beet yields as much as did 2.6 or 5.0 kg ha-1 rotary cultivated into the top 15 cm of soil lightly or moderately infested with beet cyst-nematode, Heterodera schachtii. In a very heavily infested soil, 1.7 kg ha-1 applied to the bands of soil increased beet yields as much as 2.6 kg ha-1 rotavated into the top 15 cm of the soil; yields were further increased by 5.0 and 9.9 kg ha-1 rotavated in but not by 3.5 kg ha-1 in the bands of soil. Soil populations of the nematode increased little or not at all whether the soil was treated with aldicarb or not. The band treatment was achieved by a vertical band- reciprocating harrow technique, which is described. The advantages of this new technique for the control of beet cyst-nematode and other soil pests of widely spaced row crops are safer application of less pesticide, thereby minimising cost of treatment and any risk to the environment, faster seedbed preparation and adequate control of pest population increase on the susceptible crop, especially if coupled with biological control.  相似文献   

18.
When applied to heavily infested sandy loam soil at planting time, as little as 5 ppm Du Pont 1410 (5-methyl I-(dimethylcarbamoyl)-N-[(methylcar-bamoyl) oxy] thioformimidate) in pots, or 2–5 ppm in field plots, effectively controlled potato cyst-nematode, Heterodera rostochiensis Woll., and greatly increased the growth and yield of susceptible potatoes. Dipping the shoots of potted King Edward potatoes once in aqeuous solution containing 2000 ppm did not control potato cyst-nematode. Nematode control was not increased when 2 or 4 kg a.i./ha was sprayed on the foliage of young Pentland Crown potatoes growing in soil already treated with the nematicide.  相似文献   

19.
Investigation of a possible association between Verticillium dahliae and H. rostochiensis (pathotype E, British notation) was based on field observations and an examination of disease development in single-stemmed potato plants grown in pots. An association was found in the distribution of the nematode and the fungus in the field, and the disease was far more severe with a combined infection than with either pathogen alone. Studies on leaf-area development and yield reduction suggest there is synergism between fungus and nematode, the reductions produced by the combined infection exceeding the sum of those produced by either pathogen alone. Fungal mycelium and the extent of host colonization by V. dahliae were greatly increased by the presence of the nematode. The possible benefits to V. dahliae in the fungus-nematode complex are discussed.  相似文献   

20.
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