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🪱 Root-Knot Nematode (Meloidogyne)

The No. 1 nematode pest -- species in India, giant cell biology, gall formation, above/below-ground symptoms, and integrated management

Having covered the basics of nematology in Section 1 -- from body organisation to management principles -- we now examine individual nematode species in detail. We begin with the most economically important one.

A vegetable farmer in Andhra Pradesh uproots a wilting tomato plant and notices swollen, knotted roots covered with bead-like galls. These galls are the handiwork of the root-knot nematode (Meloidogyne spp.) -- the number one nematode pest of agriculture worldwide. With the ability to reproduce without mating and complete 7--8 generations per year, a single female can turn a healthy field into a severely infested one within a single season.

This lesson covers:

  1. Etymology and discovery -- Berkeley (1855), Barber (1901) in India
  2. Important species in India -- M. incognita, M. hapla, M. graminicola, and others
  3. Biology -- giant cell formation, parthenogenetic reproduction, sexual differentiation
  4. Symptoms -- above-ground vs below-ground, galls vs Rhizobium nodules
  5. Integrated management -- cultural, chemical, biological, and resistant varieties
Annotated Meloidogyne forms showing female, male, J2, egg mass, pyriform female, vermiform male, and infective stage
Meloidogyne is easiest to remember by form: a swollen pyriform female, a vermiform male, and the infective J2 that begins new root invasion.

Etymology and Discovery

  • Meloidogyne = Greek: melon (apple/gourd) + oides (resembling) + gyne (female) = apple-shaped females.
  • Berkeley (1855) first reported root galls on greenhouse cucumber in England.
  • In India, first reported by Barber in 1901 on tea (Kerala) -- also the first ever plant parasitic nematode reported from India.

Important Species in India

Species Distribution / Host Key Feature
M. incognita Throughout India; vegetables (tomato, potato, brinjal, chilli, okra, cucurbits) Most widespread; greatest economic losses
M. hapla Temperate/hilly areas only Northern root-knot nematode
M. arenaria Gujarat; groundnut Associated with sandy soils
M. graminicola Eastern India; rice Adapted to waterlogged conditions
M. exigua Karnataka; coffee Specific to coffee roots
M. brevicauda Assam; tea --

The perineal pattern (ridges and grooves on the vulva-anus area) is the primary morphological tool for species identification -- unique to each species like a fingerprint.

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