| URL: | http://nematodes.myspecies.info |
| Full name: | NEMATODES taxonomy, morphology and phylogeny |
| Description: | The Nematology Research Unit focuses on taxonomy, phylogeny, morphology, and biology of nematodes from natural and agricultural ecosystems, including free-living, plant-parasitic, virus-vector, facultatively parasitic, and entomopathogenic nematodes. Our main objective is to provide a more comprehensive description of nematode biodiversity, based on a combined acquisition of morphological, molecular, ecological and biological data. |
| Year founded: | 2015 |
| Last update: | |
| Version: | |
| Accessibility: |
Accessible
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| Country/Region: | United Kingdom |
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| University/Institution: | Independent Plant Nematology Consultant |
| Address: | Independent Plant Nematology Consultant, Harrogate, North Yorkshire, England, UK |
| City: | Harrogate |
| Province/State: | |
| Country/Region: | United Kingdom |
| Contact name (PI/Team): | Wim Bert |
| Contact email (PI/Helpdesk): | wim.bert@UGent.be |
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An updated list of the plants associated with plant-parasitic Aphelenchoides (Nematoda: Aphelenchoididae) and its implications for plant-parasitism within this genus. [PMID: 26623893]
Few Aphelenchoides spp. are facultative plant-parasites (foliar and bulb nematodes); three of them are well known in agricultural systems, namely Aphelenchoides besseyi, A. fragariae and A. ritzemabosi. Ten other plant-parasitic species, A. arachidis, A. bicaudatus, A. blastophthorus, A. dalianensis, A. ensete, A. nechaleos, A. paranechaleos, A. saprophilus, A. sphaerocephalus and A. subtenuis, have been reported from a limited number of plant species. We compiled a new database of the associated plants for these thirteen species, a comprehensive list that includes 1104 reports from 126 botanical families. A. besseyi, A. fragariae and A. ritzemabosi represent 94% of the reports, circa 83% and 16% of the total reports correspond to flowering plants and ferns, respectively, with three records on conifers and two from other botanical groups also listed. Most plant-parasitic Aphelenchoides show a remarkably broad diversity of associated plants. Most species appear to have no specific plant hosts (i.e. are generalists). The broad host ranges of these species and absence of more intimate interactions with the associated plants highlights the primitive mode of parasitism in Aphelenchoides species, making them potentially interesting in the study of the evolution of plant parasitism. Even though the compiled list of associated plants is long, it probably only represents a fraction of the potential range. The complete compilation has been uploaded to http://nematodes.myspecies.info/. |