Distribution of entomopathogenic nematodes in Southern Cameroon

A first survey of entomopathogenic nematodes (EPN) was conducted in three agro-ecological zones of Southern Cameroon in 2007 and 2008. Entomopathogenic nematodes were recovered from 26 of 251 soil samples (10.4%). Three species, Heterorhabditis baujardi, Steinernema sp. A and Steinernema sp. B were...

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Autores principales: Ngo Kanga, F., Waeyenberge, L., Hauser, S., Moens, M.
Formato: Journal Article
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: Elsevier 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77438
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author Ngo Kanga, F.
Waeyenberge, L.
Hauser, S.
Moens, M.
author_browse Hauser, S.
Moens, M.
Ngo Kanga, F.
Waeyenberge, L.
author_facet Ngo Kanga, F.
Waeyenberge, L.
Hauser, S.
Moens, M.
author_sort Ngo Kanga, F.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description A first survey of entomopathogenic nematodes (EPN) was conducted in three agro-ecological zones of Southern Cameroon in 2007 and 2008. Entomopathogenic nematodes were recovered from 26 of 251 soil samples (10.4%). Three species, Heterorhabditis baujardi, Steinernema sp. A and Steinernema sp. B were found. The two steinernematids were considered unidentified species. Among the positive samples, 23 samples contained only H. baujardi (88.5%), two contained Steinernema sp. A co-occurring with H. baujardi (7.7%), and one sample contained Steinernema sp. B (3.9%). H. baujardi was frequent in forest and fruit crop (cocoa and oil palm plantations). Steinernema sp. A was found in a tree plantation of teak, Steinernema sp. B in a forest habitat. Nematodes were mostly present in acidic soils with pH ranging from 3.7 to 7.0. The highest EPN presence was recorded in sandy loam, sandy clay loam, sandy clay and clay soils. EPNs were not recovered in sand, loamy sand and clay loam soils. Using principal component analysis for elucidating the major variation patterns among sampling sites, four factors explaining for 73.64% of the overall variance were extracted. Factors were a combination of geographical (latitude, longitude, altitude), soil (pH, contents of sand, silt and clay, organic carbon, texture), and moisture (wilting point, field capacity) parameters as well as climatic parameters (mean annual rainfall, mean air temperature). Logistic regression and redundancy analyses (RDA) revealed that soil pH, longitude, available water and altitude were associated with presence and absence of EPN. Both logistic regression and RDA indicated that, increasing soil pH and longitude, associated with decreasing altitude, led to higher percentages of samples containing entomopathogenic nematodes.
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spelling CGSpace774382024-05-01T08:15:37Z Distribution of entomopathogenic nematodes in Southern Cameroon Ngo Kanga, F. Waeyenberge, L. Hauser, S. Moens, M. entomopathogenic nematodes plantations A first survey of entomopathogenic nematodes (EPN) was conducted in three agro-ecological zones of Southern Cameroon in 2007 and 2008. Entomopathogenic nematodes were recovered from 26 of 251 soil samples (10.4%). Three species, Heterorhabditis baujardi, Steinernema sp. A and Steinernema sp. B were found. The two steinernematids were considered unidentified species. Among the positive samples, 23 samples contained only H. baujardi (88.5%), two contained Steinernema sp. A co-occurring with H. baujardi (7.7%), and one sample contained Steinernema sp. B (3.9%). H. baujardi was frequent in forest and fruit crop (cocoa and oil palm plantations). Steinernema sp. A was found in a tree plantation of teak, Steinernema sp. B in a forest habitat. Nematodes were mostly present in acidic soils with pH ranging from 3.7 to 7.0. The highest EPN presence was recorded in sandy loam, sandy clay loam, sandy clay and clay soils. EPNs were not recovered in sand, loamy sand and clay loam soils. Using principal component analysis for elucidating the major variation patterns among sampling sites, four factors explaining for 73.64% of the overall variance were extracted. Factors were a combination of geographical (latitude, longitude, altitude), soil (pH, contents of sand, silt and clay, organic carbon, texture), and moisture (wilting point, field capacity) parameters as well as climatic parameters (mean annual rainfall, mean air temperature). Logistic regression and redundancy analyses (RDA) revealed that soil pH, longitude, available water and altitude were associated with presence and absence of EPN. Both logistic regression and RDA indicated that, increasing soil pH and longitude, associated with decreasing altitude, led to higher percentages of samples containing entomopathogenic nematodes. 2012-01 2016-10-27T08:30:47Z 2016-10-27T08:30:47Z Journal Article https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77438 en Limited Access Elsevier Ngo Kanga, F., Waeyenberge, L., Hauser, S. & Moens, M. (2012). Distribution of entomopathogenic nematodes in Southern Cameroon. Journal of Invertebrate Pathology, 109(1), 41-51.
spellingShingle entomopathogenic nematodes
plantations
Ngo Kanga, F.
Waeyenberge, L.
Hauser, S.
Moens, M.
Distribution of entomopathogenic nematodes in Southern Cameroon
title Distribution of entomopathogenic nematodes in Southern Cameroon
title_full Distribution of entomopathogenic nematodes in Southern Cameroon
title_fullStr Distribution of entomopathogenic nematodes in Southern Cameroon
title_full_unstemmed Distribution of entomopathogenic nematodes in Southern Cameroon
title_short Distribution of entomopathogenic nematodes in Southern Cameroon
title_sort distribution of entomopathogenic nematodes in southern cameroon
topic entomopathogenic nematodes
plantations
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/77438
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