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Today

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Title: Today


1
Today
  • Characteristics
  • Brief History
  • Nematodes as Parasites
  • Importance
  • Form and Function
  • General Disease Cycle of Plant Parasitic Nematode

2
NematodesChapter 15 pg 826 - 874
  •  
  • The term Nematode is of Greek and Latin origin
  •    Greek               Latin Nema thread   
    oid like   "threadlike worms"
  •  
  • Nematodes are animals therefore they are in
  • Kingdom Animalia 
  •     Phylum Nemata
  • 30,000 described species
  • 3,000 attack plants

3
Characteristics of a nematode
  • 1. Invertebrate (without a backbone)
  • 2. Pseudocoelomate (body cavity not surrounded by
    peritoneum)
  • 3. Round in cross section 
  • 4. Vermiform (worm shaped) at one or more points
    in its life cycle
  • 5. Heterotrophic (must eat for metabolic
    synthesis)
  • 6. Nonsegmented (as opposed to true worms and
    insects)
  • 7. Motile (sinusoidal wavelike movement resulting
    from contractions in the longitudinal muscles) 
  • Active movement by nematodes rarely exceeds 75
    cm.  However, spreading of nematodes  is
    primarily due to passive means such as movement
    of infested soil and crop residue and by water. 

4
Nematode Size
  • Nematodes range in size from about 200 microns
    Sphaeronmema minutissima to 26 feet for the blue
    whale parasite, Placentanema gigantissima.
  • Plant parasitic species range from 250 to 3,000
    microns long and 15 to 35 microns in diameter.

5
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6
Nematode Size
7
History
  • Ancient times
  • 1) Emperor's Classic of Internal Medicine (2700
    BC - China) - reference to the intestinal
    roundworm, Ascaris lumbricoides
  • 2) Hippocrates (430 BC) -  first record of the
    pinworm, Enterobius vermicularis
  • 3) The Bible (Deuteronomy 14 6-8) - sanitation
    laws for the Hebrews
  • 4) The Bible (Numbers 214-9)
  • Fiery Serpent
  •  Dracunculus medinensis

8
History
  • Modern Times (Europe)
  • 1) 1743 - Needham observes Anguina tritici in
    blighted wheat kernels
  • 2) 1855 - Berkeley describes first root-knot
    nematode on cucumber in a glasshouse in England.
  • 3) 1870-1910 - Kuhn works with and perfects the
    first method of soil fumigation (carbon
    disulfide) for nematode control.

9
History
  • Modern Times (America)
  • 1) 1851 - Leidy publishes first study of
    nematodes in the U.S.
  • 2) 1900s - Many and varied works of N. A. Cobb,
    the father of nematology in the U.S.
  • 3) 1948 - 1st Nematology course at the University
    of California, Berkeley.
  • 4) 1961 - Society of Nematologists founded

10
Where do nematodes live?
11
Nematodes of Humans!
  • Pinworm especially children
  • Hookworm domestic animals, humans are a dead
    host
  • Heartworms - domestic animals, humans are a dead
    host
  • Trichinella trichinellosis of man
  • Guinea worms
  • Elephantiasis

12
Where do nematodes live?
  • 90 of all plant parasitic nematodes are found in
    the roots and in the soil environment.
  • In this environment, 2/3 live asectoparasites
    and 1/3 as endoparasites.
  • Some species
  • Have juveniles as ecto and adults as
    endoparasites
  • Will change parasitism depending on age and type
    of host, environment, etc.
  • Migratory or sedentary
  • 10 of all plant parasitic nematodes are found on
    or in above ground plant parts.
  • In this environment, only 1/5 live as
    ectoparasites while the majority live as
    endoparasites.

13
Importance
Annual losses due to nematodes are estimated at
over 80 billion.
 Life-sustaining crops   Loss    Other economically  important crops   Loss
Banana 19.7   Citrus 14.2
Barley 6.3   Coffee 15.0
Cassava  8.4   Cotton 10.7
Chickpea 13.7   Eggplant 16.9
Potato 12.2   Grape 12.5
Rice 10.0   Papaya 15.1
Soybean 10.6   Pineapple 14.9
Sugarcane 15.3   Tomato 20.6
Average 10.7   Average 14.0
14
Important concepts
  • All nematodes have well-developed muscular,
    digestive, excretory, reproductive, and nervous
    systems all covered with a layer of cells called
    the cuticle.
  • 2. Nematodes differ from higher animals in that
    they lack organized circulatory and respiratory
    systems.
  • 3. The digestive and reproductive systems are of
    the most taxonomic importance.  Only adult
    females should be used when identifying
    nematodes.

15
Important concepts
  • 4. The digestive system extends from the mouth to
    the anus and includes these parts
  • Mouth, which is in the center of 6 lips
  • b. Stylet, structure that acts as a syringe and
    is used to
  • 1. penetrate the plant cell 2. secrete enzymes
    and take up nutrients from the plant 3. help
    hatch from egg
  • c. Esophagus, which contains a median bulb that
    performs as a pump for enzyme secretion and
    nutrient uptake.
  • d. Intestine, facilitates digestion and
    absorption of nutrients.
  • e. Anus, opening from which waste is expelled
    from the intestine.

16
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17
Morphology
18
Important concepts
  • 5. Reproductive system
  • a. Male      Testes, location of sperm
    production
  •      Spicules, paired, protrusible copulatory
    structures that are used to open the vulva for
    sperm deposition
  • b. Female     Ovary, location of egg production,
    nematodes may have one or two ovaries
  •      Vulva, transverse opening to the outside
    environment 

19
Nematode Reproduction
  • There are three types of nematode reproduction
  • 1. Amphimixis - union of sperm and egg
  • 2. Hermaphroditism - functional male and female
    sex organs on the same individual
  • 3. Parthenogenesis - the production of offspring
    from eggs which have NOT been fertilized
  • A nematode life cycle (egg to egg) generally
    requires 3 to 4 weeks.

20
General Lifecycle
  • 1. Egg development
  • 2   First-stage juvenile (J1) occurs within the
    egg
  • 3.  J1 molts (shedding of cuticle), becomes a
    second-stage juvenile (J2), and hatches  
  • 4.  J2 (infective stage) molts to J3
  • 5.  J3 molts to J4
  • 6.  J4 molts to adult (the fourth and final molt)
  • 7.  Depending on the species, mature adults
    produce eggs singly or in mass after mating or
    parthenogenesis

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22
Damage
  • Mechanical injury results from the nematode
    stylet puncturing the cell wall, and is followed
    by the secretion of enzymes and nutrient
    extraction. This process leaves cells that are
    damaged or completely destroyed. 
  • Nematode damage can result in a variety of
    symptoms 
  • 1. Lesions
  • 2. Galls or swellings 
  • 3. Excessive root branching 
  • 4. Twisted or distorted stems and/or leaves 
  • 5. Disruption in flower development / sterility 
  • 6. Dead or incapacitated root tips
  • Disease Complexes
  • While nematodes are devastating pathogens by
    themselves, their most significant influence in
    agriculture is a result of their participation in
    pathogen complexes. 
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