BMC Ecology | |
How anthropogenic changes may affect soil-borne parasite diversity? Plant-parasitic nematode communities associated with olive trees in Morocco as a case study | |
Research Article | |
Guillaume Besnard1  Mohammed Ater2  Abdelmajid Moukhli3  Aïcha El Oualkadi3  Ahmed El Bakkali4  Thierry Mateille5  Johannes Tavoillot5  Odile Fossati-Gaschignard5  Elodie Chapuis6  Abdelhamid El Mousadik7  Mohamed Aït Hamza7  Grażyna Winiszewska8  Ewa Dmowska8  Nadine Ali9  Bouchaib Khadari1,10  Laila Essalouh1,10  | |
[1] CNRS, UMR EDB, Université Toulouse III Paul Sabatier, Bâtiment 4R1, 118 Route de Narbonne, 31062, Toulouse Cedex 9, France;Faculté des Sciences et Techniques, Université Abdelmalek Essaadi, BP 2062, 93030, Tétouan, Morocco;INRA, CRRA, BP 513, 40000, Marrakech, Morocco;INRA, UMR APCRPG, BP 578, 50000, Meknes, Morocco;IRD, UMR CBGP, 755 Avenue du Campus Agropolis, CS30016, 34988, Montferrier-sur-Lez Cedex, France;IRD, UMR CBGP, 755 Avenue du Campus Agropolis, CS30016, 34988, Montferrier-sur-Lez Cedex, France;IRD, UMR IPME (IRD/Université de Montpellier/CIRAD), BP 64501, 911 Avenue Agropolis, 34394, Montpellier Cedex 5, France;UMR PVBMT, 3P-CIRAD, 7 chemin de l’Irat, Ligne paradis, 97410, Saint Pierre, Réunion;Laboratoire LBVRN, Faculté des Sciences d’Agadir, Université Ibn Zohr, BP 8106, 80000, Agadir, Morocco;Museum and Institute of Zoology PAS, Wilcza 64, 00-679, Warsaw, Poland;Plant Protection Department, Faculty of Agriculture, Tishreen University, PO Box 2233, Latakia, Syrian Arab Republic;IRD, UMR CBGP, 755 Avenue du Campus Agropolis, CS30016, 34988, Montferrier-sur-Lez Cedex, France;UMR AGAP, SUPAGRO, Campus CIRAD, TAA-108/03, Avenue Agropolis, 34398, Montpellier Cedex 5, France; | |
关键词: Anthropisation; Communities; Functional diversity; Morocco; Olive; Plant-parasitic nematodes; Taxonomical structures; | |
DOI : 10.1186/s12898-016-0113-9 | |
received in 2016-08-06, accepted in 2016-12-16, 发布年份 2017 | |
来源: Springer | |
【 摘 要 】
BackgroundPlant-parasitic nematodes (PPN) are major crop pests. On olive (Olea europaea), they significantly contribute to economic losses in the top-ten olive producing countries in the world especially in nurseries and under cropping intensification. The diversity and the structure of PPN communities respond to environmental and anthropogenic forces. The olive tree is a good host plant model to understand the impact of such forces on PPN diversity since it grows according to different modalities (wild, feral and cultivated olives). A wide soil survey was conducted in several olive-growing regions in Morocco. The taxonomical and the functional diversity as well as the structures of PPN communities were described and then compared between non-cultivated (wild and feral forms) and cultivated (traditional and high-density olive cultivation) olives.ResultsA high diversity of PPN with the detection of 117 species and 47 genera was revealed. Some taxa were recorded for the first time on olive trees worldwide and new species were also identified. Anthropogenic factors (wild vs cultivated conditions) strongly impacted the PPN diversity and the functional composition of communities because the species richness, the local diversity and the evenness of communities significantly decreased and the abundance of nematodes significantly increased in high-density conditions. Furthermore, these conditions exhibited many more obligate and colonizer PPN and less persister PPN compared to non-cultivated conditions. Taxonomical structures of communities were also impacted: genera such as Xiphinema spp. and Heterodera spp. were dominant in wild olive, whereas harmful taxa such as Meloidogyne spp. were especially enhanced in high-density orchards.ConclusionsOlive anthropogenic practices reduce the PPN diversity in communities and lead to changes of the community structures with the development of some damaging nematodes. The study underlined the PPN diversity as a relevant indicator to assess community pathogenicity. That could be taken into account in order to design control strategies based on community rearrangements and interactions between species instead of reducing the most pathogenic species.
【 授权许可】
CC BY
© The Author(s) 2017
【 预 览 】
Files | Size | Format | View |
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RO202311092567823ZK.pdf | 1541KB | download |
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