1 / 32

Principles and Practices of Nematode Control

Principles and Practices of Nematode Control. Terminology. Pi = Initial Nematode Population Pt = Threshold level (ETL, Damaging level, Pathogenic level) Pf = Final Nematode Population Nematode control required only if Pi > Pt Nematode Control - aims at eradication

wylie
Télécharger la présentation

Principles and Practices of Nematode Control

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Principles and Practices of Nematode Control Walia CCSHAU

  2. Terminology • Pi = Initial Nematode Population • Pt = Threshold level (ETL, Damaging level, Pathogenic level) • Pf = Final Nematode Population Nematode control required only if Pi > Pt Nematode Control - aims at eradication Nematode Management – aims at keeping the nematode population below Pt Walia CCSHAU

  3. Walia CCSHAU

  4. Methods of Nematode Management • Cultural • Physical • Chemical • Host resistance • Regulatory • Biological • Integrated Walia CCSHAU

  5. Cultural Methods • Crop rotation • Growing a non-host crop in between two susceptible ones • Non-host crop must be economically viable, locally acceptable and should not promote any new pest of disease problem • Rotation of wheat with gram, mustard for the control of Heterodera avenae Walia CCSHAU

  6. Crop Rotation Wheat - Wheat Fenugreek - Wheat Wheat - Wheat Oats - Wheat Walia CCSHAU

  7. 2. FALLOWING Cultural Methods • Fallowing • PPNs are obligate parasites, cannot survive without food • Flooding • PPNs are aerobic; they will die due to asphyxiation in flooded lands KEEPING THE FIELD BLANK Walia CCSHAU

  8. Cultural Methods • Propagation through healthy planting material • Many nematode diseases spread through infected planting material; burrowing nematode in banana suckers, citrus nematode in infected citrus saplings, earcockle disease of wheat with contaminated seed • Removal or destruction of infected plants • Removal and destruction of root stubbles soon after harvest • Organic manuring/Amendments • Decomposition products (fatty acids) are toxic to PPNs • Increase in the population of micro-organisms, including nematode antagonists • Improved plant growth leads to tolerance against nematode damage Walia CCSHAU

  9. Cultural Methods • Trap crops • Nematodes penetrate but fail to develop inside some crops like Crotalaria; can be used as green manure after a few days • Antagonistic crops • Root exudates of certain crops contain nematoxic compounds • Onion • Garlic • Tagetes (ᾳ-terthienyl) • Asparagus (asparagusic acid) • Can be used as interculture Walia CCSHAU

  10. Cultural Methods • Time of sowing • Advancing crop sowing by 2-3 weeks to escape nematode infection; older crop suffer less damage even if infection occurs • Soil solarization • Deep summer ploughing • Plastic mulching Walia CCSHAU

  11. Physical methods • Most nematodes cannot tolerate temperature > 50-60 C • Hot water treatment of infected plant material (bulbs, corms, tubers, rhizomes runners, seeds etc. ) is highly successful • Temperature-Time combinations are to be standardized for each crop/material • Examples • HWT of bulbs of ornamental crops against Stem & Bulb nematode, Ditylenchusdipsaci • White tip disease of rice against white tip nematode, Aphelenchoidesbesseyi Walia CCSHAU

  12. Chemical control • Involves use of Nematicides or Nematocides • Pre-requisites • When Pi is very high • Crop is valuable • Quick results are warranted • Generally discouraged because of • Residue problems in edible parts • Environmental pollution • Toxicity to non-target organisms • Resurgence of pest problems • Cost considerations Walia CCSHAU

  13. Classification of Nematicides Walia CCSHAU

  14. Fumigants • Highly volatile halogenated hydrocarbons • Upon application into soil, turn into gaseous phase and diffuse through soil pore spaces • Kill nematodes due to blocking enzymes by substitution with halogen moieties • Used extensively during 1950-60s • Examples • DD – Dichloropropane and dichloropropene • EDB – Ethylene dibromide • MBr – Methyl bromide • 1,3 D – 1,3 dichloropropene • DBCP - Dibromochloropropene Walia CCSHAU

  15. Problems involved with Fumigants • Require high doses which are phytotoxic, hence need pre-plant application • Waiting period of 3-5 weeks • Need special applicators • Need soil surface sealing with covers • Need special field preparations • Efficacy dependant upon edaphic factors • Some proved carcinogenic and leave residues in fruits Walia CCSHAU

  16. Non-fumigants • Advantages • Effective against insects also • Effective at low dosages • Easy to apply and handle • Less phytotoxic an can be applied to standing crops • Mostly systemic in nature • Relatively non-volatile Walia CCSHAU

  17. Organophosphates Walia CCSHAU

  18. Effect of Carbofuran against CCN in Wheat Untreated Carbofuran Walia CCSHAU

  19. Economising Nematicidal Use • Seedling bare root dip treatment • Seed treatment • Coating, Dipping • Nursery bed treatment • Row treatment in widely spaced crops • Spot/basin area treatment in perennials Walia CCSHAU

  20. Host Resistance • Effective, Economical and Environmentally safe • Steps involved in breeding a disease resistant variety • Devising techniques for assessment of resistance • Screening of large germplasm, including wild species in some cases • Study of inheritance of resistance • Breeding resistant lines through cross/back cross, which have commercial traits • Rigorous testing under field conditions Walia CCSHAU

  21. Nematode Resistant Crop Varieties Walia CCSHAU

  22. Walia CCSHAU

  23. Regulatory Method - Quarantine • Legal enforcement to prevent introduction or check further spread of pests/diseases • Directorate of Plant Protection, Quarantine and Storage (Ministry of Agriculture, GOI), through DIP Act • International • Plant Protection Inspectors at all airports, seaports and landports for commercial material • Research material inspected by NBPGR, NBAGR • Domestic • Golden Nematode of Potato included in DIP Act 1971 Walia CCSHAU

  24. Biological Control • Classical biological control: Action of predators, parasites and pathogens to control pests • Ambit of biological control expanded now-a-days to include several other mechanisms, including antibiosis, host resistance etc. • Natural bio-control : Antagonistic biotic interactions among co-habiting natural populations of organisms • Introduced Biological Control • Inoculative release • Inundative release Walia CCSHAU

  25. Nematode Antagonists • Predators • Collemboles • Tardigrades • Enchytreids • Protozoa • Predatory mites • Predacious nematodes • Mononchus • Seinura • Predacious fungi Walia CCSHAU

  26. Predacious fungi Examples Sticky hyphae : Stylopage Sticky knobs: Arthrobotrys Non-constricting rings: Dactylella Constricting rings: Dactylaria Walia CCSHAU

  27. Parasites • Fungi • Egg parasites • Paecilomyces lilacinus • Pochonia chlamydosporia (Verticillium chlamydosprium) • Female parasites • Nematophthora gynophila • Vermiform stages • Catenaria Walia CCSHAU

  28. Parasites • Bacteria • Pasteuria penetrans Walia CCSHAU

  29. Other Antagonists • Bacteria • Pseudomonas fluorescens • Bacillus subtilis • Azotobacter chroococcum • Glucoacetobacter diazotrophicus Walia CCSHAU

  30. Integrated Nematode Management • INM seeks to stabilize pest nematode population below damaging levels (Pt) through integration of various unilateral and effective practices leading to a long-term package programme or schedule based on ecologically sound, economically viable and acceptable principles Walia CCSHAU

  31. Walia CCSHAU

  32. Walia CCSHAU

More Related