Data di Pubblicazione:
2003
Abstract:
Severe root infection of wild olive (Olea europea L. ssp. sylvestris), together with heavy soil infestation by the reniform
nematode Rotylenchulus macrosoma, was detected in a natural wild olive orchard on sandy soil in Cádiz province, Andalucía, southern
Spain. Most, but not all, of the morphometric characters of this population agreed with those reported for immature and adult females
and males in previously studied populations.Sedentary immature and mature females showed a semi-endoparasiticfeeding habit in wild
and cultivated olives (cvs Arbequina and Picual). Naturally infected roots of wild olive responded to nematode infection identically to
arti cially infected olive planting stocks. The feeding site induced by R. macrosoma on olive roots consists of a stelar syncytium, which
originates from an endodermal cell enlarging by a curved sheet of pericycle cells formed by hypertrophy of pericycle cells adjacent to
the feeding cell. There were obvious anatomical differences between the feeding sites induced by R. macrosoma and R. macrodoratus
on olive roots.
Tipologia CRIS:
01.01 Articolo in rivista
Keywords:
histopathology; host-response; morphology; new geographic record; reproduction.
Elenco autori:
Troccoli, Alberto; Vovlas, Nicola
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