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Read the
magazine
story to find out more. New Pecan
Pest IdentifiedBy Alfredo Flores March 19, 2002A team of scientists from the
Agricultural Research Service
Nematology
Laboratory in Beltsville, Md., and New
Mexico State University (NMSU) has found that root-knot nematode,
Meloidogyne partityla, was the cause of a recent decline in yields from
mature pecan trees in New Mexico. The decline occurred despite normal
fertilization and irrigation practices. This finding of M. partityla is significant because it is the first
report of its presence in New Mexico and only the second report of it in the
Western Hemisphere, according to ARSnematologist Zafar A. Handoo. He examined a collection of fresh pecan roots
sent by NMSU scientists in October 2000 and made the identification. The first discovery of M. partityla in the United States was in Texas
in 1996. Host range tests conducted there revealed that the pest prefers to
feed on hickory, pecan and walnut trees. Georgia and Arizona have reported
cases of the nematode as well since the New Mexico outbreak. M.
partityla was first discovered in South Africa in 1986. Nematodes are microscopic worms that attack plant roots. Root-knot nematodes
are particularly dangerous because they are root parasites that can seriously
damage many economic plants and crops worldwide. Although not likely to kill
pecan trees, M. partityla will debilitate them and lower their
productivity. New Mexico is the second largest pecan-growing state in the United States,
producing 32 million pounds in 2000, and is home to more than 30,000 acres of
pecan trees. To help avoid future threats to the states $50 million pecan
industry, scientists are now evaluating control measures and educating growers
to recognize M. partityla and prevent its spread. More information can be found in the
March issue of
Agricultural Research. ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency. U.S. Department of Agriculture |