Abstract

SUMMARYIn experiments applying water regimes ranging from one eighth to twice the recorded average rainfall to six soils (two light sands and four silty clay loams) consistent positive correlations were found between rainfall and (a) the growth of foliage and roots of spring barley and spring oats, (b) the number of larvae which invaded the root system, (c) the number of immature females in July, and (d) the incidence of the fungus Verticillium chlamydosporium, an egg parasite of H. avenae. Final cyst numbers were sometimes lower than the number of immature females, probably because the latter were destroyed by the ‘Entomophthora‐like’ fungus (Kerry & Crump 1977). Final populations of cysts and eggs were not always proportional to the number of larvae in root systems (even when the proportion of males was constant) but appeared more likely to be so in light sandy soils.

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