IMPACT OF TILLAGE AND RESIDUES FROM ROTATION CROPS ON THE NEMATODE COMMUNITY IN SOIL AND SURFACE MULCH DURING THE FOLLOWING SUGARCANE CROP
By GR STIRLING; NV HALPIN; MJ BELL; PW MOODY
THE IMPACT of three cropping histories (sugarcane, maize and soybean)
and two tillage practices (conventional tillage and direct drill) on plantparasitic
and free-living nematodes in the following sugarcane crop was
examined in a field trial at Bundaberg. Soybean reduced populations of
lesion nematode (Pratylenchus zeae) and root-knot nematode
(Meloidogyne javanica) in comparison to previous crops of sugarcane or
maize but increased populations of spiral nematode (Helicotylenchus
dihystera) and maintained populations of dagger nematode (Xiphinema
elongatum). However the effect of soybean on P. zeae and M. javanica
was no longer apparent 15 weeks after planting sugarcane, while later in
the season, populations of these nematodes following soybean were as
high as or higher than maize or sugarcane. Populations of P. zeae were
initially reduced by cultivation but due to strong resurgence tended to be
higher in conventionally tilled than direct drill plots at the end of the plant
crop. Even greater tillage effects were observed with M. javanica and X.
elongatum, as nematode populations were significantly higher in
conventionally tilled than direct drill plots late in the season. Populations
of free-living nematodes in the upper 10 cm of soil were initially highest
following soybean, but after 15, 35 and 59 weeks were lower than after
sugarcane and contained fewer omnivorous and predatory nematodes.
Conventional tillage increased populations of free-living nematodes in
soil in comparison to direct drill and was also detrimental to omnivorous
and predatory nematodes. These results suggest that crop rotation and tillage not only affect plant-parasitic nematodes directly, but also have
indirect effects by impacting on natural enemies that regulate nematode
populations. More than 2 million nematodes/m2 were often present in
crop residues on the surface of direct drill plots. Bacterial-feeding
nematodes were predominant in residues early in the decomposition
process but fungal-feeding nematodes predominated after 15 weeks. This
indicates that fungi become an increasingly important component of the
detritus food web as decomposition proceeds, and that that the rate of
nutrient cycling decreases with time. Correlations between total numbers
of free-living nematodes and mineral N concentrations in crop residues
and surface soil suggested that the free-living nematode community may
provide an indication of the rate of mineralisation of N from organic
matter.