Soil moisture conditions alter behavior of entomopathogenic nematodes

Author/Creator ORCID

Date

2024-01-22

Department

Program

Citation of Original Publication

Frankenstein, Dana, Macawan S Luu, Jennifer Luna-Ayala, Denis S Willett, and Camila S Filgueiras. “Soil Moisture Conditions Alter Behavior of Entomopathogenic Nematodes.” Journal of the Science of Food and Agriculture n/a, no. n/a. Accessed February 12, 2024. https://doi.org/10.1002/jsfa.13326.

Rights

CC BY 4.0 DEED Attribution 4.0 International

Subjects

Abstract

A variety of environmental factors can disrupt biotic interactions between plants, insects and soil microorgan-isms with consequences for agricultural management and production. Many of these belowground interactions are mediatedby volatile organic compounds (VOCs) which can be used for communication under appropriate environmental conditions.Behavioral responses to these compounds may likewise be dependent on varying soil conditions which are influenced by achanging climate. To determine how changing environmental conditions may affect VOC-mediated biotic interactions, we useda belowground system where entomopathogenic nematodes (EPNs)–tiny roundworm parasitoids of soil-borneinsects–respond to VOCs by moving through the soil pore matrix. Specifically, we used two genera of EPNs–HeterorhabditisandSteinernema–that are known to respond to four specific terpenes–⊍-pinene, linalool,D-limonene andpregeijerene–released by the roots of plants in the presence of herbivores. We assessed the response of these nematodesto these terpenes under three moisture regimes to determine whether drier conditions or inundated conditions may influencethe response behavior of these nematodes.RESULTS: Our results illustrate that the recovery rate of EPNs is positively associated with soil moisture concentration. As soilmoisture concentration increases from 6% to 18%, substantially more nematodes are recovered from bioassays. In addition,wefind that soil moisture influences EPN preference for VOCs, as illustrated in the variable response rates. Certain compoundsshifted from acting as a repellent to acting as an attractant and vice versa depending on the soil moisture concentration.CONCLUSION: On a broad scale, we demonstrate that soil moisture has a significant effect on EPN host-seeking behavior. EPNefficacy as biological control agents could be affected by climate change projections that predict varying soil moisture concen-trations. We recommend that maintaining nematodes as biological control agents is essential for sustainable agriculture devel-opment, as they significantly contribute not only to soil health but also to efficient pest management.© 2024 The Authors.Journal of The Science of Food and Agriculturepublished by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society ofChemical Industry.