Parasitology, Harold W. Manter Laboratory of

 

Date of this Version

1989

Comments

Published in Weed Science, 1989. Volume 37:771-777

Abstract

Methods for evaluating the efflicacy of potential classical biocontrol agents were outlined for a model biocontrol agent-weed-crop system. A proposed biocontrol agent (the fiddleneck flower gall nematode), its weed host (coast fiddleneck), and wheat were used as representative organisms. An additive experimental design (inverse linear model) was used. Regression of the reciprocal of the average plant biomass of each species onto the density of itself and the other plant species yielded competitive indices that measure the competitive ability of the plants. The results of 2 yr of field experiments revealed a dramatic change in the competitive interaction between fiddleneck and wheat due to the nematode. During the 1986-87 season in the absence of the nematode, fiddleneck intraspecific competition was 33 times stronger than interspecific competition with wheat. In the presence of the nematode, intra- and interspecific competition of fiddleneck were nearly equal. Only the coefficients that measure interspecific competition changed significantly in the presence of the nematode while the coefficients for intraspecific competition did not. Nomenclature: Coast fiddleneck, Amsinckia intermedia Fischer and Meyer #3 AMSIN; wheat, Triticum aestivum L. 'Anza'; fiddleneck flower gall nematode, Anguina amsinckiae (Steiner and Scott, 1935) Thorne, 1961.

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