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Journals
Journal of Nematology
Volume 51 (2019): Issue 1 (January 2019)
Open Access
First report of the cactus cyst nematode,
Cactodera cacti,
from a cactus garden in Idaho
Andrea M. Skantar
Andrea M. Skantar
,
Zafar A. Handoo
Zafar A. Handoo
,
Mihail R. Kantor
Mihail R. Kantor
,
Maria N. Hult
Maria N. Hult
and
Saad. A. Hafez
Saad. A. Hafez
| Jul 23, 2019
Journal of Nematology
Volume 51 (2019): Issue 1 (January 2019)
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Article Category:
Arts & Humanities
Published Online:
Jul 23, 2019
Page range:
1 - 6
Received:
Feb 06, 2019
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.21307/jofnem-2019-044
© 2019 Andrea M. Skantar et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Figure 1:
Photomicrographs of second-stage juveniles (J2) of Cactodera cacti. (A-B) tails; (C-D) head; (E) lateral field.
Figure 2:
(A–C) Photomicrographs of vulva cones of Cactodera cacti. A-B scale bar = 50 µm and C = 10 μm; C arrows showing the anal area and punctations.
Figure 3:
Phylogenetic relationships of Cactodera cacti among other species and populations within Cactodera, as inferred from an alignment of ITS rDNA. A 50% majority rule consensus tree from Bayesian analysis was generated from two runs as inferred from alignment of ITS rDNA using the GTR + I + G model of nucleotide substitution. Branch support values above 50% are shown. New sequences are highlighted in bold type on appropriate branches.
Figure 4:
Phylogenetic relationships of Cactodera cacti among other species and populations of cyst nematodes, as inferred from an alignment of partial Hsp90 genomic DNA. A 50% majority rule consensus tree obtained from Bayesian analysis was generated using the GTR + I + G model of nucleotide substitution. Branch support values above 50% are shown on appropriate branches. New sequences are highlighted in bold type.