The Australian banana industry produces approximately 350,000 tonnes of fruit annually, all of which is sold on the domestic market. The industry is comprised of two components: a subtropical industry based in northern New South Wales, southeast Queensland and around Carnarvon in Western Australia, and a tropical component located around Kununurra in Western Australia, Darwin in the Northern Territory and the increasingly important wet tropics region of a p p l i e d s o i l e c o l o g y 4 0 (2 0 0 8) 1 5 5-1 6 4 a r t i c l e i n f o Article history:
To help banana growers to decide when to apply nematicide, economic thresholds were determined for tropical north Queensland, subtropical south-east Queensland and northern New South Wales, Australia. This was done by monitoring nematode populations, root damage and growth parameters of bunching pseudostems in several commercial crops for several years. There was no significant consistent change in the disease index in consecutive years in any of the regions, although there was great variation between crops. However, on two crops in the tropics, the disease index of roots increased. To reduce the risk of not applying nematicide when required, the economic threshold was adjusted down to allow for this increase on some crops. In the tropics with a crop value of $25 000 ha 71 year 71 , the economic threshold occurred at a root disease index = 9.2±15.6. In the subtropics with a crop value of $10 000±15 000, the economic threshold occurred at a root disease index = 20.5±35.5. In the subtropics, Radopholus similis (burrowing nematode) was as pathogenic as Pratylenchus goodeyi (lesion nematode) as measured by root necrosis. However, both nematodes were less pathogenic in the subtropics than was R. similis in the tropics. In the subtropics, R. similis tended to be more numerous in warmer months and P. goodeyi in cooler months.
Radopholus similis is one of the world's ten most economically important plant-parasitic nematodes. It is especially a problem in banana cultivation, where the nematodes' feeding reduces yields and causes toppling disease. It has been suggested that the genus Radopholus Thorne, 1949 might have an Australian origin, but the native range of R. similis (Cobb, 1893) is not well known. Here we undertake a phylogeographical study of samples of R. similis from banana plantations down the eastern seaboard of Australia, with additional samples from Costa Rica and accessions from GenBank, to examine the origin of pest populations of R. similis. The lack of genetic diversity of R. similis within Australia, and its sharing of a worldwide pest haplotype, suggest that populations of R. similis in Australia were introduced from a single source population, most likely from the Southeast Asian region. This might not be the case in Africa, where extensive genetic diversity has been found.
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