# Host Status of Ornamental Shade Trees and Shrubs to Plant Parasitic Nematodes

**Authors:** T. Benedetti, J. E. Weiland, I. A. Zasada

PMC · DOI: 10.2478/jofnem-2024-0024 · Journal of Nematology · 2024-06-28

## TL;DR

This study evaluated how well several ornamental trees and shrubs support the growth of three types of plant-parasitic nematodes in a greenhouse setting.

## Contribution

The first report of host status for several ornamental plants to specific nematode species, including non-host status for Buxus sempervirens to P. penetrans.

## Key findings

- All tested ornamental trees and shrubs were fair to good hosts for Meloidogyne incognita and M. hapla.
- Buxus sempervirens was not a host for Pratylenchus neglectus, with an RF value near 0.
- Quercus alba, Quercus garryana, and Acer campestre were first reported as hosts for M. incognita, M. hapla, and P. penetrans.

## Abstract

Oregon leads the United States in nursery production of shade trees and is third in deciduous and broadleaf evergreen shrub production. Plant-parasitic nematodes have been implicated in problems with the growth of plants in nurseries and are also of phytosanitary risk. A greenhouse experiment was conducted to evaluate the host status of four trees (Quercus alba, Quercus garryana, Acer campestre, Thuja occidentalis) and two shrubs (Buxus sempervirens, Rhododendron catawbiense) to Meloidogyne incognita, Meloidogyne hapla, and Pratylenchus neglectus. Each plant/nematode treatment was replicated five times, and the experiment was conducted twice. Plants were inoculated with 3,000 eggs of M. incognita or M. hapla and 2,500 individuals of P. neglectus two weeks after planting. After three months, the plants were harvested, and the total density of nematodes in soil and roots for P. neglectus and the total density of second-stage juveniles (J2) in soil and eggs on roots for M. hapla and M. incognita were determined. The final nematode population (Pf) and reproductive factor (RF = Pf/initial population density) were calculated. For M. incognita and M. hapla, all of the ornamental trees and shrubs would be considered as fair to good hosts with RF values > 1. Meloidogyne incognita had the highest Pf (5,234 total J2 and eggs/pot) and RF value (28.4) on A. campestre. For P. neglectus, all of the ornamental trees and shrubs were fair to good hosts, except for B. sempervirens. Buxus sermpervirens was not a host for P. neglectus, with an RF value of almost 0. This is the first report of Q. alba, Q. garryana, and A. campestre as hosts for M. incognita, M. hapla, and P. penetrans. This is also the first report of T. occidentalis and R. catawbiense as hosts for P. penetrans and the non-host status of B. sermpervirens for P. penetrans.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Quercus alba (taxon 3513), Quercus garryana (taxon 168162), Acer campestre (taxon 66205), Thuja occidentalis (taxon 3317), Buxus sempervirens (taxon 4002), Rhododendron catawbiense (taxon 257784), Meloidogyne incognita (taxon 6306), Meloidogyne hapla (taxon 6305), Pratylenchus neglectus (taxon 222096)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Nematodes (MESH:D009349)
- **Species:** Quercus alba (white oak, species) [taxon 3513], Thuja occidentalis (species) [taxon 3317], Meloidogyne incognita (southern root-knot nematode, species) [taxon 6306], Acer campestre (field maple, species) [taxon 66205], Meloidogyne hapla (species) [taxon 6305], Pratylenchus neglectus (species) [taxon 222096], Buxus sempervirens (species) [taxon 4002], Quercus garryana (Oregon oak, species) [taxon 168162], Rhododendron catawbiense (Catawba rosebay, species) [taxon 257784]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

50 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11323970/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11323970