Published February 20, 2018 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Integrative taxonomy of root-knot nematodes reveals multiple independent origins of mitotic parthenogenesis

  • 1. Ghent University
  • 2. International Institute of Tropical Agriculture

Description

During sampling of several Coffea arabica plantations in Tanzania severe root galling, caused by a root-knot nematode was observed. From pure cultures, morphology and morphometrics of juveniles and females matched perfectly with Meloidogyne africana, whereas morphology of the males matched identically with those of Meloidogyne decalineata. Based on their Cox1 sequence, however, the recovered juveniles, females and males were confirmed to belong to the same species, creating a taxonomic conundrum. Adding further to this puzzle, re-examination of M. oteifae type material showed insufficient morphological evidence to maintain its status as a separate species. Consequently, M. decalineata and M. oteifae are synonymized with M. africana, which is herewith redescribed based on results of light and scanning electron microscopy, ribosomal and mitochondrial DNA sequences, isozyme electrophoresis, along with bionomic and cytogenetic features. Multi-gene phylogenetic analysis placed M. africana outside of the three major clades, together with M. coffeicola, M. ichinohei and M. camelliae. This phylogenetic position was confirmed by several morphological features, including cellular structure of the spermatheca, egg mass position, perineal pattern and head shape. Moreover, M. africana was found to be a polyphagous species, demonstrating that "early-branching" Meloidogyne spp. are not as oligophagous as had previously been assumed. Cytogenetic information indicates M. africana (2n = 21) and M. ardenensis (2n = 51–54) to be a triploid mitotic parthenogenetic species, revealing at least four independent origins of mitotic parthenogenesis within the genus Meloidogyne. Furthermore, M. mali (n = 12) was found to reproduce by amphimixis, indicating that amphimictic species with a limited number of chromosomes are widespread in the genus, potentially reflecting the ancestral state of the genus. The wide variation in chromosome numbers and associated changes in reproduction modes indicate that cytogenetic evolution played a crucial role in the speciation of root-knot nematodes and plant-parasitic nematodes in general.

Notes

Files

Karyology Meloidogne ardenensis.zip

Files (10.9 GB)

Name Size Download all
md5:66913fa087e4d5e142a2be0875c297db
2.9 GB Preview Download
md5:8525cf9343e9d969d9970e4d59590e75
1.1 GB Preview Download
md5:822e7288f4de4907425d93fe4a0554bd
1.7 GB Preview Download
md5:501799beaaf5d3692d4c48cac0166a4f
4.4 GB Preview Download
md5:390eae28bfc499196e0fa662705dba01
689.8 MB Preview Download
md5:a2535a87ddccb9862774da11987e5c34
125.1 MB Preview Download
md5:20ce2b281334311682341785cd63d34a
34.2 kB Preview Download

Additional details

Related works