Abstract

The pine wood nematode (PWN) Bursaphelenchus xylophilus is recognized as a major invasive species in many countries and causes widespread mortality in pine trees. Pine wood nematode disease (PWD) has spread northward from southern China to several areas of Liaoning Province, which has temperatures outside of the optimal range for this disease. To determine whether obvious variations in the population adaptability of PWN are involved in its rapid spread from southern to northern China, this study compared the differences in morphology of eight southern strains and eight northern strains and the pathogenicity of the 16 strains to Pinus thunbergii, the pine species that is the most susceptible to PWD in China, and to P. tabuliformis, the main PWN host in northern Liaoning Province. The southern-strain females were smaller than the northern-strain females, except for strain GD32. The size differences between the males of the different strains were not significant. The difference in pathogenicity between the northern and southern strains to P. tabuliformis was more significant than the difference in their pathogenicity to P. thunbergii. The pathogenicity differentiation among northern strains was lower than that among southern strains, and the northern strains showed stronger pathogenicity to P. tabuliformis. The P. tabuliformis inoculation experiment showed that the pathogenicity of GD32, JS27, FJ14, LN13, and LN06 was significantly higher than that of FJ13. The results suggest that some PWN populations in the southern region, which are better adapted to P. tabuliformis, were likely directly transmitted to the northern region, resulting in the spread of PWD in the northern region. The spread of PWN from the south did not necessarily require a process of adaptation to the host or to the northern climate.

Highlights

  • Pine wood nematode disease (PWD) is a devastating forest disease caused by pine wood nematode (PWN)

  • PWNs from the north, and the body length was between 898.3 μm and 964.5 μm

  • Except for GD32, the body width of females of southern strains was between 27.4 μm and 29.5 μm

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Summary

Introduction

Pine wood nematode disease (PWD) is a devastating forest disease caused by pine wood nematode (PWN). The stem pests of pine trees are responsible for the short-distance natural transmission medium of the disease, and human economic and logistics activities are the main factors associated with the long-distance transmission and spread of the disease [1]. In the 1980s, the disease was introduced to China and South Korea and to Portugal and Spain, gradually becoming one of the most dangerous tree diseases worldwide [3,4,5,6,7]. Since the first discovery of PWD in China in 1982, the disease has developed rapidly in just a few decades. Its rapid spread in tropical and subtropical regions has caused serious damage

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