The pinewood nematode (PWN),
Bursaphelenchus xylophilus, was cultured on an unidentified fungus, which was related to
Contortylenchus genitalicola, grown on potatoglucose-agar medium supplemented with yeast extract in a flattened culture bottle.
C. genitalicola is an entomophagous and mycetophagous nematode parasitic to the Japanese pine sawyer,
Monochamus alternatus. The mean number of dispersal 3rd stage juveniles (DSJ
3s) and the mean percentage of DSJ
3 in the populations of PWN were 24, 870 and 93.1% at 80 days' culture. Dispersal 4th stage juveniles (DSJ
4s) developed in the culture bottles when
B. xylophilus were co-incubated with pupa or adult
M. alternatus on the fungus. DSJ
4s (mean number, 9, 105) were recovered from 9-day-old
M. alternatusadults that had been coincubated with
B. xylophilus during the pupal and adult stages. The usual theory that occurrence of DSJ
4 is triggered mainly by existence of
Monochamus cerambycid pupa and adult has been supported by the
in vitro experiment. Jpn. J. Nematol. 32 (2), 53-59 (2002).
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