Abstract

SUMMARYDicotyledonous plants were reliably inoculated with stem nematodes by placing drops of 1.3% carboxymethylcellulose containing the surface sterilised worms between the cotyledons or in the leaf axils of recently emerged seedlings raised in pots of cool, moist soil. Inoculating onion leaves, bean stems and potato tubers or potato leaves gave variable results and inoculating onion, tulip and narcissus bulbs and lucerne and red clover stems was usually unsuccessful. An attempt to characterise 67 stem nematode populations by the reactions of a number of different plants failed for lack of useful differential hosts. Lucerne was, however, resistant to all but lucerne populations.Multiplication of stem nematode populations varied greatly between cultivars of lucerne or red clover. Some cultivars were resistant to some populations of lucerne or red clover stem nematodes and susceptible to others. These differences could not be ascribed to differences in viability of the nematodes or to differences in success of the inoculations. They indicate the presence of different pathotypes or biotypes in different populations of a so‐called ‘host race’ and indicate the need for new resistant cultivars to be tested against a range of populations before they are released for general use. Amongst lucerne cultivars tested, Vertus was resistant to some lucerne stem nematode populations and susceptible to others. The supposedly resistant lucerne cultivars Euver and Lifeuil were as susceptible as was Europe. Amongst red clover cultivars tested, Redhead, Kühn, Changins and Mt Calme were susceptible, Britta, Lucrum and Temara were the least resistant, Renova, Rittinova and Quin were intermediate and susceptible to one or more of the populations tested but Norseman and especially Sabtoron were very resistant.

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