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Featured researches published by Georges Reversat.


Nematology | 2003

Management of Meloidogyne graminicola and yield of upland rice in South-Luzon, Philippines

Imelda R. Soriano; Georges Reversat

Meloidogyne graminicola, the rice root-knot nematode, has become a constraint on Asian rice production due to rice cropping intensification and increasing scarcity of water. This work relates to the assessment of crop rotation, fallow and nematicide treatments in naturally infested fields to manage M. graminicola populations and prevent yield losses. One or two consecutive crops of cowpea or seasons of fallow before a rice crop lowered nematode populations and improved rice yield by 30-80%. Methyl bromide was used to determine yield potential and almost eradicated the nematode, trebling rice yield. Carbofuran improved yield of the first rice crop but did not affect the second rice crop. Due to its short life cycle, M. graminicola populations were similar after only a single rice crop and after three consecutive crops. It is recommended that, to ensure higher rice yields, M. graminicola populations should be maintained at low density by non-host crop rotations or fallows, ideally for two seasons before planting rice.


Nematology | 1999

Use of a mixture of sand and water-absorbent synthetic polymer as substrate for the xenic culturing of plant-parasitic nematodes in the laboratory

Georges Reversat; Johnny Boyer; Christianne Sannier; Anne Pando-Bahuon

Xenic culturing of plant-parasitic nematodes on host plants was successful in sterilised natural soils in the laboratory, particularly in native soil, in which large populations of selected nematode species were observed in situ (Mountain, 1960; Wallace, 1963). However, there are cases when native soil cannot be used. For example, this would not be possible in our laboratory in France for the culturing of tropical nematode species, because importation of large quantities of tropical soils is prohibited for regulatory reasons and because shipping would be too expensive anyway. Moreover, tropical and temperate soils have quite different physical and chemical properties (Duchaufour, 1995) and it would not be possible to find in France soils similar to the native tropical soils. Moreover, most of the soils that are available in gardening stores are too rich in clay and organic matter to be easily handled in the laboratory. As an alternative to native tropical soil, we tried to use pure silica sand. This substrate looked very promising because it could be obtained from quarries for the glass industry and it has several convenient features: unlimited and inexpensive supply, fine granulometry from 100 to 300 pm, dryness and cleanliness, which made sterilisation unnecessary. The addition of a mineral nutritive solution, such as Hoagland’s solution, provided the mineral requirements for host plant growth. Nevertheless, during a culturing period of several weeks or months, leaves became chlorotic and the growth of the host plant was poor, compared with the growth observed on sterilised native soil. This was mainly due to the fact that watering caused the sand progressively to reach maximal compactness (Sloane, 1984). This probably reduced aeration and prohibited penetration of the hardened substrate by the roots of many host plants. Besides, water retention of pure sand is low and, when the plant has been growing for some time, water vapour loss becomes high and the plants need watering up to several times daily. Thus, pure sand was found convenient for short term (10-15 days) experiments only, e.g., determination of the invasion rate of infective J2 of Heterodera spp. (Reversat & Merny, 1973). In this paper we report the use of a mixture of pure silica sand and water-absorbent synthetic polymer as substrate for the successful culturing of some tropical nematodes in our laboratory. The addition of this polymer to the silica sand balanced the drawbacks of pure sand mentioned above: progressively acquired compactness and low water content. Such water absorbents have been developed by the chemical industry since the seventies for various purposes, particularly as soil conditioners in agriculture for dry areas (De Boodt, 1990; Rognon, 1995). Most of them are based on an acrylic polymer of high molecular weight, able to gelify by rapidly absorbing up to 400 times its own weight of deionized water. In commercial packages (e.g., Graind’eauB in France, AgrosokeB in UK, Hydro Kristall@ in Germany, etc.), these absorbents are conditioned as granules 1 to 2 mm in size. After absorption of deionized water, they form pieces of gel up to 10 mm in size, which could not be mixed homogeneously with sand. Consequently, the pieces of gel were first converted into a paste by sieving under pressure. For this purpose, we used a 100 ml plastic syringe with the bottom end cut out and replaced by a screen made of stainless steel wire gauze, with an aperture of 0.25 mm, solidly melted into the plastic wall of the syringe. The syringe was filled with pieces of gel and the pressure of the plunger forced the gel to pass through the screen apertures. This resulted in filaments of 0.25 mm by up to 10 mm. Since these filaments were not found to be convenient, they were put back in the same syringe and processed in the same manner to form a pasty gel. This pasty gel (consisting of 200 g of water and 2 g of


Biology and Fertility of Soils | 1999

Effects of trefoil cover crop and earthworm inoculation on maize crop and soil organisms in Reunion Island

Johnny Boyer; Roger Michellon; André Chabanne; Georges Reversat; Richard Tibere

Abstract Traditional tree fallows have been abandoned on the western coast of the Reunion Island because of the increasing need for cultivated land. Soil fertility is no longer restored and crop yields have decreased drastically. The leguminous plant, Lotus uliginosus (trefoil), used as a cover crop, has made possible the control of erosion, the restoration of soil macrofauna, especially earthworms, and the increase in crop yields. When trefoil was associated with earthworms (Amynthas corticis), the densities of maize, the yields of maize stalk and dry matter, the yield of trefoil fodder dry matter, and the biomass and respiratory activity of soil microflora were considerably increased. The combined effects of their association led to a significant decrease in populations of the plant-parasitic nematode, Pratylenchus vulnus, in maize roots, and in the population of borers. Some soil chemical features were modified.


Nematology | 2004

Effect of inoculations with single and multiple juveniles on release of progeny of Meloidogyne graminicola from susceptible rice

Georges Reversat; Luzviminda Fernandez

Seedlings of susceptible rice were inoculated with single or with 86 second-stage juveniles (J2) of Meloidogyne graminicola. After inoculation in a sandy substrate, rice seedlings were grown hydroponically to recover progeny. Following inoculation with a single juvenile (SJI), 71-73% of seedlings released J2 progeny at 84 days after inoculation (DAI). This confirmed the ability of this species to reproduce by parthenogenesis. After SJI, the proportion of inoculated seedlings releasing J2 increased steadily from 21-63 DAI. On the contrary, after inoculation with 86 J2, release of progeny was high for all seedlings as early as 28 DAI. Thus progeny formed after SJI remained captive in galls for a longer time. In the same sandy substrate, J2 were able to invade rice roots and develop in flooded conditions as well as in non-flooded conditions.


Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2004

Heavy metal accumulation by two earthworm species and its relationship to total and DTPA-extractable metals in soils

Jun Dai; Thierry Becquer; James Rouiller; Georges Reversat; Johanne Nahmani; Patrick Lavelle


Applied Soil Ecology | 2004

Influence of heavy metals on C and N mineralisation and microbial biomass in Zn-, Pb-, Cu-, and Cd-contaminated soils

Jun Dai; Thierry Becquer; James Rouiller; Georges Reversat; Patrick Lavelle


Ecology Letters | 2005

Belowground organism activities affect plant aboveground phenotype, inducing plant tolerance to parasites

Manuel Blouin; Yasmine Zuily-Fodil; Anh-Thu Pham-Thi; Daniel Laffray; Georges Reversat; Anne Pando; Jérôme Ebagnerin Tondoh; Patrick Lavelle


Nematology | 1999

Resistance to rice root-knot nematode Meloidogyne graminicola identified in Oryza longistaminata and O. glaberrima

Imelda R. Soriano; Véronique Schmit; Darshan S. Brar; Jean-Claude Prot; Georges Reversat


Comptes Rendus Biologies | 2004

Plant parasite control and soil fauna diversity

Patrick Lavelle; Manuel Blouin; Johnny Boyer; Patrice Cadet; Daniel Laffray; Anh-Thu Pham-Thi; Georges Reversat; William Settle; Yasmine Zuily


Comptes Rendus De L Academie Des Sciences Serie Iii-sciences De La Vie-life Sciences | 1997

Analyse des courbes de survie de nématodes phytoparasites selon le modèle de Teissier

Georges Reversat; Jean-Pierre Rossi; Pierre Bernhard

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Johnny Boyer

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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Roger Michellon

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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Thierry Becquer

Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuária

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James Rouiller

Centre national de la recherche scientifique

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Guy Trébuil

Centre de coopération internationale en recherche agronomique pour le développement

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