Abstract

Summary.During 1994 studies were undertaken to improve ginger (Zingiber officinale Roscoe) yield against the nematodes Pratylenchus penetrans, Meloidogyne incognita, Helicotylenchus dihystera and Tylenchorhynchus mashhoodi in Himachal Pradesh (HP) (India) by inter‐cropping bell‐pepper (Capsicum annum L) in eight different sequences (treatments). Inter‐cropping of “one rhizome of ginger x one plant of bell‐pepper” gave the highest ginger yield (600 g per rhizome). This treatment was completely free from P. penetrans and M. incognita. All treatments with bell‐pepper plants equal to or higher in number to that of ginger rhizomes had higher ginger yields than treatments with ginger alone or with fewer bell‐pepper plants. In the former, populations of P. penetrans and M. incognita were lower than in the latter treatments. The yield of ginger varied irrespective of population densities of H. dihystera and T. mashhoodi, indicating that P. penetrans and M. incognita are the major nematode problems of ginger in HP. Bell‐pepper was a non‐host to P. penetrans and non‐preferred host to M. incognita. This helped to improve ginger yields by making the rhizosphere unfavourable for the development and multiplication of the major ginger nematode pests.

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