The Effect of Endophytic Fungi on Nematode Populations in Summer-dormant and Summer-active Tall Fescue
Publicado en línea: 21 jul 2017
Páginas: 87 - 97
Recibido: 09 nov 2015
Aceptado: 08 oct 2021
DOI: https://doi.org/10.21307/jofnem-2017-013
Palabras clave
© 2016 James K. Rogers et al., published by Sciendo
This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Summer-active (continental) and summer-dormant (Mediterranean) tall fescue morphotypes are each adapted to different environmental conditions. Endophyte presence provides plant parasitic nematode resistance, but not with all endophyte strains and cultivar combinations. This study sought to compare effects of four nematode genera on continental and Mediterranean cultivars infected with common toxic or novel endophyte strains. A 6-mon greenhouse study was conducted with continental cultivars, Kentucky 31 (common toxic) and Texoma MaxQ II (novel endophyte) and the Mediterranean cultivar Flecha MaxQ (novel endophyte). Endophyte-free plants of each cultivar were controls. Each cultivar × endophyte combination was randomly assigned to a control, low or high inoculation rate of a mixed nematode culture containing stunt nematodes (