Impact of land use on the distribution and diversity of entomopathogenic nematodes in Embu and Taita Districts, Kenia



Título del documento: Impact of land use on the distribution and diversity of entomopathogenic nematodes in Embu and Taita Districts, Kenia
Revista: Tropical and subtropical agroecosystems
Base de datos: PERIÓDICA
Número de sistema: 000372734
ISSN: 1870-0462
Autors: 1
3
1
2
1
3
1
Institucions: 1Kenyatta University, Department of Biochemistry and Biotechnology, Nairobi. Kenia
2Kenya Agricultural Research Institute, National Agricultural Research Laboratories, Nairobi. Kenia
3University of Nairobi, Department of Plant Science and Crop Protection, Nairobi. Kenia
Any:
Volum: 13
Número: 1
País: México
Idioma: Inglés
Tipo de documento: Artículo
Enfoque: Experimental, analítico
Resumen en inglés Natural entomopathogenic nematodes (EPNs) are considered as potential biological control agents against soil-borne insect pests. This study was conducted to determine the impact of land use on the distribution, occurrence and diversity of entomopathogenic nematode community. Isolation of EPNs was done using the baiting technique and application of morphological identification methods revealed presence of the genus Steinernema. Land use intensification negatively affected the occurrence and recovery frequency in soils of Embu and Taita districts. The occurrence of EPNs was high in soils from coffee than maize and beans which had more nematodes than planted forest and napier grass followed by natural forest and tea respectively. PCR-RFLP of the internal transcribed spacer region on the ribosomal(r) DNA of the EPN isolates and digestion of the products by Alu I enzyme showed molecular variations among the isolates. The study has demonstrated that the frequency of occurrence and species variation of EPNs is different in various land uses
Disciplines Agrociencias,
Biología
Paraules clau: Suelos,
Helmintos,
Nemátodos entomopatógenos,
Uso del suelo,
Distribución espacial,
Biodiversidad,
Embu,
Taita,
Kenia
Keyword: Agricultural sciences,
Biology,
Soils,
Helminths,
Land use,
Spatial distribution,
Biodiversity,
Embu,
Taita,
Kenya
Text complet: Texto completo (Ver HTML)