• Title/Summary/Keyword: Arthrobotrys sinensis

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First Report of an Unrecorded Nematode-trapping Fungus, Arthrobotrys sinensis in Korea (국내 미기록 선충포식성 곰팡이 Arthrobotrys sinensis의 형태 및 분류)

  • Ha, Jihye;Kang, Heonil;Kang, Hangwon;Kim, Donggeun;Lee, Dongwoon;Kim, Yongchul;Choi, Insoo
    • Korean journal of applied entomology
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    • v.58 no.1
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    • pp.9-13
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    • 2019
  • Nematode-trapping fungi use various specialized traps to capture nematodes. A fungus that can capture nematodes in three dimensional adhesive networks was isolated from the soil around the root of Cucumis melo L. (Oriental melon) in Seongju, Korea. The conidiophores were found to be septate, hyaline, erect and $290-528(342.8){\mu}m$ high. It produces obovoid shape and 1-3 septate (commonly 2-septate) conidia with a size of $30.5{\times}20.3{\mu}m$. Molecular analysis of 5.8 S rDNA displayed 99% similarity to Arthrobotrys sinensis. On the basis of morphological, morphometric and molecular studies, the fungus was identified as A. sinensis. It is the first report in Korea which can be one of biological control resource of plant-parasitic nematode.

Nematode-Trapping Fungi Showed Different Predacity among Nematode Species (선충 종류별 4종 포식성곰팡이의 포식력 차이)

  • Kang, Heonil;Choi, Insoo;Park, Namsook;Bae, Changhwan;Kim, Donggeun
    • Research in Plant Disease
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    • v.25 no.3
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    • pp.149-155
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    • 2019
  • Nematode-trapping fungi develop trap and consume nematodes are an important part of the subsoil ecosystem and they share a special predator-prey relationship. Four nematode-trapping species, there with adhesive network, Arthrobotrys oligospora, A. sinensis, A. thaumasia and one with constricting ring, Drechslerella brochopaga were collected from soils in Korea and tested their predacity against 12 different nematode species. They were three feeding groups, plant-parasitic (Meloidogyne incognita and Pratylenchus penetrans), fungivorous (Aphelenchus avenae), bacteriovorous (Betlerius sp. and Diplogasteritus sp. in diplogasterid, Panagrolaimus labiatus, P. multidentatus in panagrolaimid, Mesorhabditis irregularis, Pelodera strongyloides and Rhabditis sp., in rhabditid, and Acrobeloides sp. in cephalobid). Results showed that nematode-trapping fungi successfully captured most of nematodes in Petri dish in the group of plant-parasitic nematodes and rhabditids, moderately and variably in other nematodes in 15 days. But it didn't captured A. avenae and Acrobeloides sp. both belongs to c-p group 2. Numbers of Acrobeloides sp. and A. avenae even increased during the test period. The results of this study indicated that nematode-trapping fungi may have specificity among nematode species.