Steinernema silvaticum
Sturhan, Spiridonov & Mracek, 2005
Abstract: Steinernema
silvaticum is described from woodland soil near
Berlin, Germany. The species is quite common in European woodlands, being found
in forest soil all over Germany, in Belgium, the Czech Republic, The
Netherlands, Sweden and the UK. It was previously reported as Steinernema
sp. 'B' in Germany and the Czech Republic, and as Steinernema
sp. 'B3' in UK, Belgian and Dutch surveys. Third-stage infective juveniles are
mainly characterised by a straight body of medium length (means = 700–900
μm), lateral fields with eight equal ridges (with appearance of nine
parallel, equally spaced lines under light microscope), rather broad, flatly
rounded and continuous cephalic region, excretory pore at level of mid-pharynx
and average hyaline tail portion constituting ca half total tail length; males
with mucronate tail, yellowish spicules of ca 50 μm length and wide
manubria; females with short conoid tail with pointed non-mucronate tip. According
to the ITS rDNA sequences, S. silvaticum sp. n. belongs to the
'feltiae-kraussei-oregonense' group of Steinernema
species, although it is closest to S.
kraussei. The new species shows a high level of
nucleotide differences in ITS rDNA sequences from other steinernematid species
and can be easily distinguished from S. kraussei,
S. feltiae, S. oregonense, S. weiseri and S. jollieti by morphological characters of the infective juveniles and
males.
Sturhan, D., Spiridonov, S. & Mracek, Z. 2005. Steinernema silvaticum sp. n. (Rhabditida: Steinernematidae), a new entomopathogenic nematode from Europe. Nematology 7:227-241.