The Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is available from the Publisher.Cover illustration: The cereal and legume root-lesion nematode Pratylenchus thornei migrating into the cortical parenchyma of chickpea roots.
The evolutionary relationships of 82 species of tylenchid and aphelenchid nematodes were evaluated by use of sequence data of the D2 and D3 expansion fragments of the 28S ribosomal RNA genes. Nine automatic and one culled sequence alignments were analysed using maximum parsimony and Bayesian inference approaches. The molecular data sets showed that the order Tylenchida comprises lineages that largely correspond to two suborders, Hoplolaimina and Criconematina, and other taxonomic divisions as proposed by Siddiqi (2000). Several significant results also derived from our study include: i) the basal position of groups that include entomoparasitic nematodes within tylenchid trees; ii) paraphyly of the superfamily Dolichodoroidea sensu Siddiqi (2000); iii) evidence for a Pratylenchus, Hirschmanniella and Meloidogyne clade; and iv) lack of support for widely held traditional placement of Radopholus within Pratylenchidae and placement of this genus within Hoplolaimidae or Heteroderidae. Congruence and incongruence of molecular phylogeny and traditional classifications and morphological-based hypotheses of phylogeny of tylenchids are discussed.The order Tylenchida Thorne, 1949 includes the largest and most economically important group of plant-parasitic nematodes. As plant parasites they have diverged to exploit all plant parts including foliage, flowers and seeds, but mostly they attack roots. The order also includes mycophagous species, and a large group parasitises the haemocoel of insects and mites. Several classifications and phylogenies have been proposed for ty-
High infection rates of wild olive (Olea europaea sp. sylvestris) feeder roots and soil infestation by a new root-knot nematode were found in sandy soil at Vejer de la Frontera (Cádiz), southern Spain. Morphometric traits and analyses of the nematode esterase electrophoretic pattern as well as of the internal transcribed spacer 1 (ITS1)-5.8S gene and D2-D3 fragment of the 28S gene of rDNA showed that specimens differed clearly from known root-knot nematodes. Studies of host-parasite relationships showed a typical susceptible reaction in naturally infected wild olive plants and in olive planting stocks (cvs. Arbequina and Picual) artificially inoculated with the nematode. However, the nematode did not reproduce in artificially inoculated chickpea, pea, and tomato. Because of the ability of this new nematode to infect wild and cultivated olives only, we suggest the common name, "Mediterranean olive root-knot nematode." The species is herein described and illustrated, and named as Meloidogyne baetica n. sp. The new root-knot nematode can be distinguished from other Meloidogyne spp. by (i) the perineal pattern, which is almost similar to that of M. artiellia, characterized by distinct inner striae forming two distinct longitudinal bands, extending throughout the perineum to just below the vulva; (ii) female excretory pore anterior to the level of stylet knobs, excretory pore distance from anterior end/length of stylet ratio extremely small (0.5 to 0.8); and (iii) second-stage juveniles with elongate-conoid tail. Phylogenetic trees derived from maximum parsimony analyses showed that M. baetica is closely related to M. artiellia, the cereal and legume root-knot nematode.
During nematode surveys in southern Spain and Italy 14 populations of Xiphinema species tentatively identified as Xiphinema americanum-group were detected. Morphological and morphometrical studies identified three new species and six known Xiphinema americanumgroup species, viz.: Xiphinema parabrevicolle n. sp., Xiphinema parapachydermum n. sp., Xiphinema paratenuicutis n. sp., Xiphinema duriense, Xiphinema incertum, Xiphinema opisthohysterum, Xiphinema pachtaicum, Xiphinema rivesi, and Xiphinema santos. The Xiphinema americanum-group is the most difficult Xiphinema species group for diagnosis since the morphology is very conservative and morphometric characters often overlap. This group includes vectors of several important plant pathogenic viruses that cause significant damage to a wide range of agricultural crops. Molecular characterisation of these species using D2-D3 expansion regions of 28S rRNA, 18S rRNA, ITS1-rRNA and the protein-coding mitochondrial gene, cytochrome oxidase c subunit 1 was carried out and maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference analysis were used to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships among these species and with other Xiphinema americanum-group species.
Morphologial, biochemical, molecular and karyological analyses of different populations and races of the stem and bulb nematode Ditylenchus dipsaci have suggested that it represents a species complex, of which only D. dipsaci sensu stricto and its morphologically larger variant, known as the giant race of the stem and bulb nematode, are plant parasites of economic importance. The present study singles out the giant race from this complex, herein described as a new species named Ditylenchus gigas n. sp., on the basis of morphological and molecular data obtained from several populations collected from broad beans in southern Italy, southern Spain and Lebanon. The new species epithet, which refers to the large body size of the nematode with respect to the normal races, must be considered to be conspecific with the D. dipsaci 'giant race' from Fabaceae in recent literature. Morphologically, the new species is characterized by a body size 1AE5-2 times longer than the 'normal race', stylet delicate (11AE5-13AE0 lm long) with knobs distinctly sloping backwards, and long post-vulval uterine sac (81-150 lm long). Results of molecular analysis of rDNA sequences including the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 region, the D2-D3 fragment of the 28S gene, the small 18S subunit, the partial mitochondrial gene for cytochrome c oxidase I (mtCOI), and hsp90 gene sequences, support the new taxonomic species status for the former D. dipsaci giant race from Vicia faba, and clearly distinguish D. gigas n. sp. from D. dipsaci sensu stricto.
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