An outline on distribution and hosts of the cystoid nematodes of Ataloderinae Wouts, 1973 and Meloidoderinae Golden, 1971
Author
Ghaderi, Reza
text
Zootaxa
2019
2019-09-04
4664
3
339
350
journal article
25622
10.11646/zootaxa.4664.3.2
9bbb9723-2cfa-4602-b0af-31a9963db437
1175-5326
3385559
BA95280D-BB4E-4661-882E-B9DA4A67BD14
Sarisodera
Wouts & Sher, 1971
There is only one described species in the genus,
S. hydrophila
Wouts & Sher, 1971
, although some undetermined populations are reported in the literature.
Wouts & Sher (1971)
collected specimens of the genus
Sarisodera
from soil or roots from several habitats and localities in California including willow
(
Salix lasiolepis
Benth.
,
Salicaceae
) from Riverside County; fern (
Polypodiaceae
) and laurel (
Lauraceae
) from the University of California, Berkeley campus; fern from Humboldt County; ironwood (
Lyonothamnus floribundus
Gray
,
Rosaceae
) from Santa Cruz Island; pine (
Pinus
sp.,
Pinaceae
) from Monterey; and oak (
Quercus
sp.,
Fagaceae
) from Santa Barbara. They claimed that these collections appear to represent at least five species but sufficient specimens of only the willow population, which they described as
S. hydrophila
,
were available at the time. These authors also mentioned that specimens reported as
Heterodera
sp. by
Nickle (1960)
from white pine
(
Pinus monticola
Dougl.
,
Pinaceae
) in Idaho could be considered as a species of the genus
Sarisodera
.
Mundo-Ocampo & Baldwin (1983a)
considered
Populus
(Salicaceae)
and
Lyonothamnus
(Rosaceae)
as hosts of this nematode at the
type
locality and Santa Cruz Island, respectively.
Choi & Kim (2001)
found
S. hydrophila
around the roots of a deciduous tree (
Fraxinus rhynchophylla
,
Oleaceae
) in
Korea
.
Sturhan (2018)
found two populations from rhizosphere soil of an unidentified tree of the family
Fagaceae
and wild banana in northern
Vietnam
that are closely related to
S. hydrophila
.
Luc
et al.
(1973)
described
S. africana
from guinea grass (
Panicum maximum
,
Poaceae
) from
Senegal
, but
Baldwin & Bell (1985)
emended the diagnosis of
Sarisodera
to exclude cysts, which do not form in the
type
species,
S. hydrophila
.
They then transferred
S. africana
to their new genus
Afenestrata
. Later,
Mundo-Ocampo
et al.
(2008)
synonymized
Afenestrata
with
Heterodera
.
The histopathology of two populations of
S. hydrophila
was examined on willow (
Salix lasiolepis
Eenth.
,
Salicaceae
), cottonwood (
Populus fremontii
Wats.
,
Salicaceae
), and ironwood (
Lyonothamnus floribundus
Gray
,
Rosaceae
) using light microscopy as well as scanning and transmission electron microscopy.
S. hydrophila
induces formation of a single uninucleate hypertrophied cell (giant cell) which varies only slightly among the three hosts. Cell wall ingrowths, such as those associated with host responses to certain other plant-parasitic nematodes, were not observed in giant cells induced by
S. hydrophila
(
Mundo-Ocampo & Baldwin 1983a
).