Abstract

The effect of intraspecific competition on the development and reproduction of the slug parasitic nematode Phasmarhabditis hermaphrodita was studied in a series of laboratory experiments. Different inocula concentrations (1, 10, 25, 50, 100, 250, 500 and 1000) of P. hermaphrodita dauer juveniles (DJ) were applied to 0.02 g of homogenised slug Deroceras reticulatum on agar in multi-well plates and the development time, yield, lipid content, and body length of females and DJs were recorded. There was an inverse relationship between dose and recorded female length or lipid content. In newly emerged DJs the body length and lipid content were relatively invariable up to a dose of 250 DJs (ranging between 850 and 925 µm, 6.8 and 7.4, respectively), and decreased at higher doses (500 and 1000 DJs). The yield increased with increasing dosage to its optimum at a dose of 100 (200,000 DJs per 1 g of substrate) DJs and thereafter decreased. In the treatment with the highest dose (1000 DJs), only a minor portion of the inoculum developed to adult stage and completed their reproduction cycle while the rest remained at the larval stage. It might, therefore, be concluded that P. hermaphrodita tolerates intraspecific competition to a certain level at which crowding becomes too severe and a part of the inoculum do not develop and probably leave the site to avoid the fatal overcrowding. In conclusion, we show that intraspecific competition negatively affects the yield and quality of DJs of P. hermaphrodita, but it seems that this nematode can partly prevent overcrowding by avoiding occupied sites.

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