A checklist of the family Pratylenchidae Thorne, 1949 from Iran
Author
Alvani, Somaye
Author
Mahdikhani-Moghadam, Esmat
Author
Rouhani, Hamid
Author
Mohammadi, Abbas
text
Zootaxa
2016
4079
2
179
204
journal article
31522
10.11646/zootaxa.4079.2.2
14af78f1-eb25-474c-b50f-1496fd37b875
1175-5326
1050611
162312D2-32D7-4246-B5E8-7844BA349F79
19.
P. pseudopratensis
Seinhorst 1968
Syn:
P. sefaensis
Fortuner 1973
(Pourjam
et al
. 1997)
4♀
:
L=
508 (455–545) µm;
a
= 25.7 (23–28);
b
= 6.6 (5.5–7.6);
b'
= 4–5;
c
= 20.5 (16– 24.3);
c'
= 2.2 (1.7–2.8);
St
= 14.9 (14–15.5) µm;
V
= 77 (76–80)
Associated plants and localities.
Alfalfa (Lorestan, North Khorasan and Razavi Khorasan), almond (
Fars
, Kerman and Yazd), apple (East
Azerbaijan
), pea (Lorestan, North Khorasan and Razavi Khorasan), pistachio (
Fars
, Kerman and Yazd), plum (Alborz), rapeseed (North Khorasan), sugar beet (Lorestan and West
Azerbaijan
), walnut (Gilan) and wheat (
Fars
and Lorestan).
References.
Pourjam
et al
. 1997 [F]; Pourjam, E.
et al
., Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, 1998, pers. com; Barooti, S.
et al
., Iranian Research Institute of Plant Protection, Tehran, 2000, pers. com; Aliramaji, F.
et al
., Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, 2006, pers. com; Naseri, B.
et al
., Tarbiat Modares University, Tehran, 2008, pers. com; Naseri
et al
. 2008; Ghaderi, R.
et al
., Shiraz University, Shiraz, 2008, pers. com [P]; Ghaderi
et al
. 2008; Majd Taheri, Z.
et al
., Islamic Azad University of Damghan, Damghan, 2010, pers. com [M], Majd Taheri
et al
. 2013 [M].
Remarks.
Frederick & Tarjan (1989) pointed out that
P. sefaensis
Fortuner 1973
was not specifically compared with
P. pseudopratensis
. In fact,
P. sefaensis
can not be adequately separated from
P. pseudopratensis
, and is therefore considered a junior synonym of
P. sefaensis
(Castillo & Volvas 2007)
. In Pourjam
et al
. 1997, this species was also considered as
P. sefaensis
. The Iranian population of
P. sefaensis
(Pourjam
et al
. 1997)
closely corresponds to the original description (Fortuner 1973), but the lateral fields possesses four to six lines (
vs
four), and is sometimes structured as a wide band with a series of irregular lines similar to those of the Cameroonian population (Sakwe & Geraert 1994). Further, in some Iranian populations, the intestine overlaps the rectum.