Abstract

Citrus orchards in Catalonia, Spain were surveyed to identify microbial parasites of Tylenchulus semipenetrans, and their distribution and density. Of 62 orchards, 48 were positively infested with the citrus nematode. Fungal strains were isolated from single eggs, females or second-stage juveniles of the citrus nematode in 69% of the infested orchards. The fungi identified in order of occurrence were Paecilomyces lilacinus, Fusarium solani, Fusarium spp., Cylindrocarpon cylindroides, Verticillium fungicola, Cladosporium cladosporioides, F. oxysporum, Veronaea botryosa, Sepedonium chrysospermum, Volutella ciliata, Exophiala pisciphila and Acremonium sp. Fungal parasitism was related directly to the number of females g−1 of root and magnesium in the soil, and inversely, to the number of eggs g−1 of root and phosphorus in the soil (R 2=0.8654; P<0.0001). Nematode trapping fungi were isolated from soil samples in 29% of the orchards, and Monacrosporium elegans, Arthrobotrys dactyloides, A. javanica, A. superba and A. oligospora var. microspora, were the species present. Endospores of the hyperparasite Pasteuria adhering to vermiform stages of T. semipenetrans were found in 50% of the orchards infested with the citrus nematode.

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