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Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/10174/6787
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Title: | The Pine Wood Nematode: a personal view |
Authors: | Braasch, Helen Mota, Manuel |
Editors: | Webster, J.M. Eriksson, K.B. McNamara, D.G. |
Keywords: | nematode pinewood |
Issue Date: | 2007 |
Abstract: | The first report of the disease (“pine wilt disease”) associated with the pinewood nematode, goes back
to 1905, when Yano reported an unusual decline of pines from Nagasaki. For a long time thereafter,
the cause of he disease was sought, but without success. Because of the large number of insect species
that were usually seen around and on infected trees, it had always been assumed that the causal agent
would prove to be one of these. However, in 1971, Kiyohara and Tokushike found a nematode of the
genus Bursaphelenchus in infected trees. The nematode found was multiplied on fungal culture,
inoculated into healthy trees and then re-isolated from the resulting wilted trees. The subsequent
published reports were impressive: this Bursaphelenchus species could kill fully-grown trees within a
few months in the warmer areas of Japan, and could destroy complete forests of susceptible pine
species within a few years. Pinus densiflora, P. thunbergii und P. luchuensis were particularly
affected.
In 1972, Mamiya and Kiyohara described the new species of nematode extracted from the wood of
diseased pines; it was a named Bursaphelenchus lignicolus. Since 1975, the species has spread to the
north of Japan, with the exception of the most northerly prefectures. In 1977, the loss of wood in the
west of the country reached 80%. Probably as a result of unusually high summer temperatures and
reduced rainfall in the years 1978 and 1979, the losses were more than 2 million m3 per year. From the
beginning, B. lignicolus was always considered by Japanese scientists to be an exotic pest. But where
did it come from?
That this nematode could also cause damage in the USA became clear in 1979 when B. lignicolus was
isolated in great numbers from wood of a 39 year-old pine tree (Pinus nigra) in Missouri which had
suddenly died after the colour of its needles changed to a reddish-brown colour (Dropkin und Foudin,
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1979). In 1981, B. lignicolus was synonymised by Nickle et al. with B. xylophilus which had been
found for the first time in the USA as far back as 1929, and reported by Steiner and Buhrer in 1934. It
had originally been named Aphelenchoides xylophilus, the wood-inhabiting Aphelenchoides but was
recognised by Nickle, in 1970,to belong in the genus Bursaphelenchus. Its common name in the USA
was the "pine wood nematode" (PWN. After its detection in Missouri, it became known that B.
xylophilus was widespread throughout the USA and Canada. It occurred there on native species of
conifers where, as a rule, it did not show the symptoms of pine wilt disease unless susceptible species
were stressed eg., by high temperature. This fact was an illuminating piece of evidence that North
America could be the homeland of PWN. Dwinell (1993) later reported the presence of B. xylophilus
in Mexico.
The main vector of the PWN in Japan was shown to be the long-horned beetle Monochamus
alternatus, belonging to the family Cerambycidae. This beetle lays its eggs in dead or dying trees
where the developing larvae then feed in the cambium layer. It was already known in Japan in the 19th
century but in the 1930s, it was said to be present in most areas of Japan, but was generally
uncommon. However, with the spread of the pine wilt disease, and the resulting increase of weakened
trees that could act as breeding sites for beetles, the populations of Monochamus spp. increased
significantly In North America, other Monochamus species transmit PWN, and the main vector is M.
carolinensis. In Japan, there are also other, less efficient vectors in the genus Monochamus. Possibly,
all Monochamus species that breed in conifers can transmit the PWN. The occasional transmission by
less efficient species of Monochamus or by some of the many other beetle genera in the bark or wood
is of little significance. In Europe, M. galloprovincialis and M. sutor transmits the closely related
species B. mucronatus. Some speculate that these two insect species are “standing by” and waiting for
the arrival of B. xylophilus.
In 1982, the nematode was detected and China. It was first found in dead pines near the Zhongshan
Monument of Nanjing (CHENG et. al. 1983); 265 trees were then killed by pine wilt disease. Despite
great efforts at eradication in China, the nematode spread further and pine wilt disease has been
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reported from parts of the provinces of Jiangsu, Anhui, Guangdong, Shandong, Zhejiang and Hubei
(YANG, 2003). In 1986, the spread of the PWN to Taiwan was discovered and in 1989, the nematode
was reported to be present in the Republic of Korea where it had first been detected in Pinus
thunbergii and P. densiflora. It was though to have been introduced with packing material from Japan.
PWN was advancing.
In 1984, B. xylophilus was found in wood chips imported into Finland from the USA and Canada, and
this was the impetus to establish phytosanitary measures to prevent any possible spread into Europe.
Finland prohibited the import of coniferous wood chips from these sources, and the other Nordic
countries soon followed suit. EPPO (the European and Mediterranean Plant Protection Organization)
made a recommendation to its member countries in 1986 to refuse wood imports from infested
countries. With its Directive of 1989 (77/93 EEC), the European Community (later called the
European Union or EU) recognised the potential danger of B. xylophilus for European forests and
imposed restrictions on imports into the Europe. PWN was placed on the quarantine list of the EU and
also of other European countries. Later, in 1991, a dispensation was allowed by the Commission of the
EU(92/13 EEC) for coniferous wood from North America provided that certain specified requirements
were fulfilled that would prevent introduction. |
URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/10174/6787 |
Type: | bookPart |
Appears in Collections: | MED - Publicações - Capítulos de Livros BIO - Publicações - Capítulos de Livros
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