Nematode diversity and its association with soil properties in monocrop pigeon pea
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Date
202-07-03Author
Maina, Samuel
Karuri, Hannah
Mugweru, Julius
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Pigeon pea is a versatile pulse crop grown in semi-arid regions of Kenya; however, its production is affected by
plant-parasitic nematodes. The current study was undertaken to investigate the diversity of nematodes and the
influence of soil properties on their diversity in monocrop pigeon pea fields in Mbeere North, Embu County,
Kenya. Soil samples were collected from Gatunguru B, Gwakaithi, Itururi, Kambungu, Kanyueri, Karigiri,
Mbangua and Njarange regions. From each field, soil samples were collected from a depth of 25 cm using W-
shaped sampling pattern. The nematodes were identified to the genus level using morphological features. In
total, 46 nematode genera assigned to five trophic levels were identified across the eight regions. Abundance of
Meloidogyne, Rotylenchulus, Longidorus, Acrobeloides, Cervidellus, Panagrolaimus, Prismatolaimus and Wilsonema
varied markedly among the eight regions. Bacterivores belonging to colonizer-persister group 2 were the most
prevalent group. There were no differences in Pielou’s evenness, genus richness, Shannon and Simpson diversity
indices across the regions. Canonical correspondence analysis indicated significant correlations between certain
nematode genera and soil attributes with the first two axes accounting for 56.65% of the variance. Acrobeloides
correlated positively with Mg, C, Mn and N, and negatively with Fe. The occurrence of Hoplolaimus and Meso-
rhabditis was associated negatively with soil pH, clay and Ca, and positively with sand. The present work reveals
a high abundance of economically important PPN in monocrop pigeon pea which necessitates that appropriate
nematode management programs are implemented.