Summary
Populations reviously identified as Aphelenchoides besseyi were studied. Using an integrated approach, the A. besseyi species complex contains several cryptic species: A. besseyi sensu stricto, A. oryzae, A. pseudobesseyi sp. n. and other putative undescribed species. A population from Florida strawberry morphologically fits the A. besseyi of both Christie and Allen and is considered the only representative of this species. A Louisiana rice population fitted the descriptions of A. oryzae of both Yokoo and Fortuner; PUS length was consistently less than one-third of VA. Aphelenchoides oryzae, parasitising rice and other monocots, was re-established based on morphological and molecular datasets. Three populations from Florida ornamental plants (Dryopteris erythrosora, Echinacea sp. and Farfugium japonicum) differed from those of the two above-mentioned species and are described as A. pseudobesseyi sp. n. Populations previously identified as ‘A. besseyi’ from several countries were considered representatives of this new species, which usually had a large and conspicuous PUS, 8-14 μm wide and with a length greater than one-third of VA in 40-70% of studied specimens. Morphological variability made separation of A. pseudobesseyi sp. n. from A. oryzae and A. besseyi unreliable without the examination of numerous specimens and molecular analysis.
A lesion nematode population infecting citrus in the state of Sao Paulo, Brazil is described and named Pratylenchus jaehni sp. n. Biological, molecular and morphological characteristics of this new species are compared with those of the morphologically similar P. coffeae and P. loosi. Results of mating experiments showed that P. jaehni is reproductively isolated from P. coffeae. Molecular (D2/D3 DNA sequences) dissimilarities among P. jaehni sp. n., P. coffeae and P. loosi were documented in a previous study. The morphology of seven P. coffeae populations from tropical America and eastern Java and a P. loosi population from Sri Lanka is used for comparison with the morphology of P. jaehni sp. n. Pratylenchus jaehni differs from P. coffeae and P. loosi by only a few morphological characters of the females. The mean values of stylet length, stylet knob height, and vulva position are smaller (< 15 vs > 15 ¹m, < 2.7 vs > 2.7 ¹m, < 79 vs > 79%) than those in P. coffeae and P. loosi. The tail terminus is usually subhemispherical and smooth in P. jaehni sp. n., whereas it is commonly truncate and indented in most P. coffeae populations and bluntly or nely pointed in P. loosi. Because of the morphological similarities among P. jaehni sp. n., P. coffeae and P. loosi, examination of at least ten specimens is required to obtain a reliable diagnosis based on morphology. Nineteen morphometric parameters for P. jaehni sp. n. and P. coffeae ranged from 0-13% smaller in xed than in live specimens.
Morphological identification of spiral nematodes of the genus Helicotylenchus is a difficult task because most characters used for their diagnosis vary within species. In this paper we provide morphological and molecular characterisations of several spiral nematodes, H. broadbalkiensis, H. digonicus, H. dihystera, H. microlobus, H. paxilli and H. pseudorobustus, collected in different geographical areas of USA, Switzerland, Italy, New Zealand, Spain, UK, South Korea and Russia. We suggest that H. microlobus and H. pseudorobustus are valid species separated from each other morphologically and molecularly. Seven species with distinct molecular characteristics are also distinguished, but are not ascribed morphologically to any specific taxon because of the low number of specimens available. Phylogenetic relationships of H. pseudorobustus with other Helicotylenchus species are given as inferred from the analyses of 154 sequences of the D2-D3 of 28S rRNA gene and 37 sequences of ITS rRNA gene.
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