Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4558391 Journal of Invertebrate Pathology 2008 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

A new Steinernema species was isolated from three different sandy soil samples along the Platamona Beach, in the north-west coast of Sardinia Island (Italy). This new species is characterized by the following morphological characters: infective third-stage juvenile with a body length of 866 ± 61 (767–969) μm, distance from head to excretory pore of 63 ± 2.7 (59–68) μm, tail length of 81 ± 3.2 (76–89) μm, ratio E (%) 77 ± 3.4 (68–83); male tail with a mucron only in the second generation, spicule length of 66 ± 1.4 (64–67) μm and gubernaculum length of 44 ± 1.4 (43–46) μm in the first generation male; female of first generation with a slight vulval protrusion and ratio D (%) of 53 ± 4.0 (47–63). The new species differs distinctly from the related species (S. feltiae, S. kraussei, S. litorale, S. oregonense and S. cholashanense) in some morphometric values such as percentage of hyaline portion, ratios of gubernaculum/spicule length, spicule head length/width. The DNA analyses of the internal transcribed spacers and D2D3 regions show that the studied nematode isolates are a new species. Cross hybridisation tests with S. feltiae, S. kraussei, S. litorale, S. weiseri and S. oregonense showed that these species were reproductively isolated.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
Authors
, , , ,