Advances in yam and cassava nematology research at IITA

Progress in pest management on cassava (Manihot esculenta) in Africa has witnessed remarkable achievements over recent years in the management of African cassava mosaic virus, cassava mealy bug, cassava green mite and overall germplasm improvement for yield improvements. From the scant information a...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Coyne, D., Mudiope, J., Hugues, B.
Format: Conference Proceedings
Language:Inglés
Published: 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/98001
_version_ 1855542397733175296
author Coyne, D.
Mudiope, J.
Hugues, B.
author_browse Coyne, D.
Hugues, B.
Mudiope, J.
author_facet Coyne, D.
Mudiope, J.
Hugues, B.
author_sort Coyne, D.
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Progress in pest management on cassava (Manihot esculenta) in Africa has witnessed remarkable achievements over recent years in the management of African cassava mosaic virus, cassava mealy bug, cassava green mite and overall germplasm improvement for yield improvements. From the scant information available, root-knot nematodes appear to pose potentially serious constraints to cassava production across Africa. Under heavy infection, 98 % yield losses have been reported and in a survey in Uganda, 100 % of fields observed were infected, yet little attention has been paid to this potential constraint. On yam (Dioscorea spp.), the yam nematode, Scutellonema bradys, is a primary constraint to production and increased adoption of the crop in West Africa. In East Africa the importance of yam has declined over the last few decades and efforts to increase its promotion are hampered by nematode pests. S. bradys has to date not been observed in East Africa, but Pratylenchus sudanensis has been identified, causing similar damage to S. bradys. Meloidogyne spp. also appear to be particularly damaging to introduced, high-yielding yam lines. Screening against these nematodes is currently in progress. Research at the IITA in East and West Africa has made progress towards improved knowledge on these pests. These include initiating work on the biology and epidemiology of P. sudanensis on yam, improving our knowledge of Meloidogyne spp. important on cassava, expanding information on the distribution and incidence of nematode pests on these crops and development of management options against them.
format Conference Proceedings
id CGSpace98001
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2003
publishDateRange 2003
publishDateSort 2003
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace980012023-02-15T06:39:23Z Advances in yam and cassava nematology research at IITA Coyne, D. Mudiope, J. Hugues, B. cassava yams nematodes research Progress in pest management on cassava (Manihot esculenta) in Africa has witnessed remarkable achievements over recent years in the management of African cassava mosaic virus, cassava mealy bug, cassava green mite and overall germplasm improvement for yield improvements. From the scant information available, root-knot nematodes appear to pose potentially serious constraints to cassava production across Africa. Under heavy infection, 98 % yield losses have been reported and in a survey in Uganda, 100 % of fields observed were infected, yet little attention has been paid to this potential constraint. On yam (Dioscorea spp.), the yam nematode, Scutellonema bradys, is a primary constraint to production and increased adoption of the crop in West Africa. In East Africa the importance of yam has declined over the last few decades and efforts to increase its promotion are hampered by nematode pests. S. bradys has to date not been observed in East Africa, but Pratylenchus sudanensis has been identified, causing similar damage to S. bradys. Meloidogyne spp. also appear to be particularly damaging to introduced, high-yielding yam lines. Screening against these nematodes is currently in progress. Research at the IITA in East and West Africa has made progress towards improved knowledge on these pests. These include initiating work on the biology and epidemiology of P. sudanensis on yam, improving our knowledge of Meloidogyne spp. important on cassava, expanding information on the distribution and incidence of nematode pests on these crops and development of management options against them. 2003 2018-11-14T06:51:33Z 2018-11-14T06:51:33Z Conference Proceedings https://hdl.handle.net/10568/98001 en Limited Access Coyne, D., Mudiope, J. & Hugues, B. (2003) Advances in yam and cassava nematology research at IITA. In Oral presentation at the 16th Nematological Society of Southern Africa Symposium, 1-4 June, Somerset, (126p.).
spellingShingle cassava
yams
nematodes
research
Coyne, D.
Mudiope, J.
Hugues, B.
Advances in yam and cassava nematology research at IITA
title Advances in yam and cassava nematology research at IITA
title_full Advances in yam and cassava nematology research at IITA
title_fullStr Advances in yam and cassava nematology research at IITA
title_full_unstemmed Advances in yam and cassava nematology research at IITA
title_short Advances in yam and cassava nematology research at IITA
title_sort advances in yam and cassava nematology research at iita
topic cassava
yams
nematodes
research
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/98001
work_keys_str_mv AT coyned advancesinyamandcassavanematologyresearchatiita
AT mudiopej advancesinyamandcassavanematologyresearchatiita
AT huguesb advancesinyamandcassavanematologyresearchatiita