4.7 Review

Optimizing Safe Approaches to Manage Plant-Parasitic Nematodes

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 9, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10091911

Keywords

nematode management; biological control; mechanisms; host plant resistance; synthetic nematicide; botanicals; optimizing strategies

Categories

Funding

  1. STDF
  2. US-Egyptian project cycle 17 grant [172]
  3. NRC [12050105]
  4. National Research Centre

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This review focuses on exploring safe and effective alternative methods to minimize yield losses caused by plant-parasitic nematodes (PPNs), including biologicals, botanicals, non-host crops, and modern techniques. It provides an overview of the interactions with other biotic and abiotic factors for PPN management, evaluates specific production practices, and suggests optimizing gains from PPN control mechanisms. The review also emphasizes the importance of agricultural conservation practices to address issues related to the reliability and slow activity of biologicals against PPNs.
Plant-parasitic nematodes (PPNs) infect and cause substantial yield losses of many foods, feed, and fiber crops. Increasing concern over chemical nematicides has increased interest in safe alternative methods to minimize these losses. This review focuses on the use and potential of current methods such as biologicals, botanicals, non-host crops, and related rotations, as well as modern techniques against PPNs in sustainable agroecosystems. To evaluate their potential for control, this review offers overviews of their interactions with other biotic and abiotic factors from the standpoint of PPN management. The positive or negative roles of specific production practices are assessed in the context of integrated pest management. Examples are given to reinforce PPN control and increase crop yields via dual-purpose, sequential, and co-application of agricultural inputs. The involved PPN control mechanisms were reviewed with suggestions to optimize their gains. Using the biologicals would preferably be backed by agricultural conservation practices to face issues related to their reliability, inconsistency, and slow activity against PPNs. These practices may comprise offering supplementary resources, such as adequate organic matter, enhancing their habitat quality via specific soil amendments, and reducing or avoiding negative influences of pesticides. Soil microbiome and planted genotypes should be manipulated in specific nematode-suppressive soils to conserve native biologicals that serve to control PPNs. Culture-dependent techniques may be expanded to use promising microbial groups of the suppressive soils to recycle in their host populations. Other modern techniques for PPN control are discussed to maximize their efficient use.

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