Spiral nematodes, soil microbiome and micronutrients increase chickpea drought susceptibility but do not induce symptoms of the emerging health issue
Victoria A. Marchesini, Jennifer Town, Mario Tenuta, Fernanda Gouvea Pereira, Lana Shaw, Shaun Sharpe, Jeff Schoenau, Michelle Hubbard

TL;DR
Researchers found that spiral nematodes and soil differences worsen chickpea drought symptoms but don't cause a new health issue.
Contribution
The study identifies that nematodes and soil factors amplify drought effects but do not trigger a new chickpea health problem.
Findings
Drought symptoms were more severe in 'unhealthy' soil with higher nematode abundance.
Soil nutrients like K+ and Mg+ were higher in 'healthy' soil compared to 'unhealthy' soil.
No pathogens were found to be more abundant in 'unhealthy' soil to explain the health issue.
Abstract
In 2019, an emerging health issue was noted in chickpea in Saskatchewan, Canada. Symptoms included apical wilting, branch chlorosis and necrosis. The causes remain unclear. In 2023 these symptoms appeared on one side (“unhealthy”, UH), but not the other (“healthy”, H), of a dry field in Redvers, Saskatchewan. To test the hypothesis that Helicotylenchus, or spiral nematodes, and differences in soil microbiome and nutrients, in combination with drought, contribute to these symptoms, chickpea were grown in H and UH soil, and well-watered, or exposed to drought. Plant height, number of nodes and pods, chlorophyll fluorescence (Fv/Fm), biomass, foliar and root-rot symptoms, soil nutrients, nematodes and soil microbiome were assessed. Symptoms more consistent with drought than the emerging health issue developed. When chickpea was exposed to drought, symptoms were more severe in UH soil.…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNematode management and characterization studies · Genetic and Environmental Crop Studies · Legume Nitrogen Fixing Symbiosis
