# Galling and Reproduction of Different Isolates of Meloidogyne floridensis on Culinary Herbs

**Authors:** Diego A. H. S. Leitão, Ana Karina S. Oliveira, Janete A. Brito, Donald W. Dickson

PMC · DOI: 10.2478/jofnem-2025-0006 · Journal of Nematology · 2025-03-19

## TL;DR

This study compares how two isolates of the root-knot nematode Meloidogyne floridensis affect different culinary herbs, identifying which herbs are good or poor hosts.

## Contribution

The study provides new insights into the host range and reproductive differences of two M. floridensis isolates on culinary herbs.

## Key findings

- Catnip and tomato were the best hosts for MfGNV14, producing the highest egg counts.
- Marjoram was a non-host, while chicory, fennel, and thyme were poor hosts for both isolates.
- Basil, dill, and sage showed isolate-specific resistance or susceptibility to M. floridensis.

## Abstract

Meloidogyne floridensis was first described in Florida, USA, in 2004 but has since been reported in California, South Carolina, and Georgia. Our objective was to determine the galling and reproduction differences between two isolates of M. floridensis, Mf3 and MfGNV14, on culinary herbs. A duplicated study was performed where both isolates were inoculated separately to nine culinary herbs (basil, catnip, chicory, dill, fennel, marjoram, parsley, sage, and thyme). Tomato was used as a susceptible reference. Regardless of the isolate, chicory and marjoram had the lowest gall indices (1.85 and 1.00, respectively) and egg mass indices (1.25 and 0.90, respectively). The reproduction rate of Mf3 was greatest under catnip (959 eggs/g fresh root) and thyme (701 eggs/g fresh root), followed by sage (549 eggs/g fresh root) and parsley (501 eggs/g fresh root). Catnip (2,151 eggs/g fresh root) stood out for number of eggs among all tested herbs, followed by tomato (1,153 eggs/g fresh root) and sage (847 eggs/g fresh root) for MfGNV14. Marjoram was a non-host, chicory, fennel, and thyme were poor hosts, and catnip, parsley, and tomato were good hosts to both M. floridensis isolates. Basil, dill, and sage responses were isolate-specific, i.e., resistant to Mf3 but susceptible to MfGNV14.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Meloidogyne floridensis (taxon 298350)

## Full-text entities

- **Species:** Thymus vulgaris (common thyme, species) [taxon 49992], Solanum lycopersicum (tomato, species) [taxon 4081], Petroselinum crispum (parsley, species) [taxon 4043], Meloidogyne floridensis (species) [taxon 298350], Nepeta cataria (catmint, species) [taxon 39347]

## Full text

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## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11922528/full.md

## References

38 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11922528/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11922528