# Survey of Pulse Crop Field for Plant-Parasitic Nematodes in the Canadian Prairies

**Authors:** F. Gouvea-Pereira, M. Tenuta, D. Risula, M. W. Harding

PMC · DOI: 10.2478/jofnem-2025-0040 · Journal of Nematology · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This survey studied nematode distribution in pulse crops in the Canadian Prairies, finding high prevalence of D. weischeri and rare occurrence of the quarantine pest D. dipsaci.

## Contribution

The study clarifies the distribution of Ditylenchus species in pulse crops and confirms the presence of D. weischeri over D. dipsaci.

## Key findings

- High densities of plant-parasitic nematodes were found in several pulse crop fields.
- Ditylenchus weischeri was recovered from 20 fields, while D. dipsaci was found in only one yellow pea field.
- D. weischeri is prevalent on creeping thistle in pulse fields, and D. dipsaci is nearly absent.

## Abstract

The distribution of economically significant plant-parasitic nematodes in pulse crops in the Canadian Prairies is relatively unknown. Reports suggested that Ditylenchus dipsaci in yellow pea export was likely the nonquarantine species D. weischeri, a Canada thistle (Cirsium arvense) parasite. To determine if D. dipsaci is found in pulse plants and understand nematode distribution in the Canadian Prairies, a survey was conducted in commercial yellow pea, lentil and chickpea fields in Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba. Samples of pulse and thistle plants (flowers or pods, stems and leaves) and soil were collected from 94 fields. Nematodes were identified by morphological features and molecular analyses (species-specific PCR, PCR-RFLP, and sequencing of the partial 18S, 28S and ITS of the rDNA gene). High densities of plant-parasitic nematodes — Pratylenchus, Paratylenchus, Helicotylenchus and Telotylenchinae — were found in several fields. Ditylenchus weischeri, a parasite of thistles and not pulse crops, was recovered from 20 fields across Alberta, Saskatchewan and Manitoba; D. dipsaci was found in pods of one yellow pea field in Manitoba. These results confirm the high prevalence of D. weischeri on creeping thistle in pulse fields and the near absence of the quarantine pest D. dipsaci.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Ditylenchus dipsaci (taxon 166011), Ditylenchus weischeri (taxon 989217), Cirsium arvense (taxon 41550), Pratylenchus (taxon 45927), Paratylenchus (taxon 293601), Helicotylenchus (taxon 293581), Telotylenchinae (taxon 2949561)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Nematodes (MESH:D009349)
- **Species:** Ditylenchus weischeri (species) [taxon 989217], Lens culinaris (lentil, species) [taxon 3864], Cirsium arvense (Canada thistle, species) [taxon 41550], Paratylenchus (genus) [taxon 293601], Cicer arietinum (chickpea, species) [taxon 3827], Helicotylenchus (genus) [taxon 293581], Pratylenchus (genus) [taxon 45927], Lathyrus aphaca (yellow pea, species) [taxon 3854], Ditylenchus dipsaci (species) [taxon 166011]

## Full text

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## References

70 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12768485/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12768485