M.T.W. Vervoort
Wageningen University and Research Centre
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Featured researches published by M.T.W. Vervoort.
Phytopathology | 2012
K.D. Rybarczyk-Mydlowska; P.J.W. Mooijman; H.H.B. van Megen; S.J.J. van den Elsen; M.T.W. Vervoort; Petrus Theodorus Maria Veenhuizen; J. van Doorn; R.H.L. Dees; Gerrit Karssen; J. Bakker; Johannes Helder
Foliar nematodes, plant-parasitic representatives of the genus Aphelenchoides, constitute a minority in a group dominated by fungivorous species. Distinction between (mostly harmless) fungal feeding Aphelenchoides species and high impact plant parasites such as A. besseyi, A. fragariae, A. ritzemabosi, and A. subtenuis is severely hampered by the scarcity of informative morphological characters, some of which are only observable in specific developmental stages. Poor description of a number of non-plant-parasitic Aphelenchoides species further complicates identification. Based on (nearly) full-length small subunit ribosomal DNA (SSU rDNA) sequences (≈1,700 bp), a phylogenetic tree was generated, and the four target species appeared as distinct, well-supported groups. Notably, this genus does not constitute a monophyletic group: A. besseyi and A. ritzemabosi cluster together and they are phylogenetically isolated from A. fragariae, A. subtenuis, and most other fungivorous species. A phylum-wide SSU rDNA framework was used to identify species-specific DNA motifs. For the molecular detection of four plant-parasitic Aphelenchoides species, polymerase chain reaction primers were developed with high, identical annealing temperatures (63°C). Within the molecular framework presented here, these primers can be used for the rapid screening of plant material and soil for the presence of one or multiple foliar nematode species.
PLOS ONE | 2012
M.T.W. Vervoort; J. Arie Vonk; Paul Mooijman; Sven van den Elsen; Hanny van Megen; Peter Veenhuizen; Renske Landeweert; Jaap Bakker; Christian Mulder; Johannes Helder
Soils are among the most complex, diverse and competitive habitats on Earth and soil biota are responsible for ecosystem services such as nutrient cycling, carbon sequestration and remediation of freshwater. The extreme biodiversity prohibits the making of a full inventory of soil life. Hence, an appropriate indicator group should be selected to determine the biological condition of soil systems. Due to their ubiquity and the diverse responses to abiotic and biotic changes, nematodes are suitable indicators for environmental monitoring. However, the time-consuming microscopic analysis of nematode communities has limited the scale at which this indicator group is used. In an attempt to circumvent this problem, a quantitative PCR-based tool for the detection of a consistent part of the soil nematofauna was developed based on a phylum-wide molecular framework consisting of 2,400 full-length SSU rDNA sequences. Taxon-specific primers were designed and tested for specificity. Furthermore, relationships were determined between the quantitative PCR output and numbers of target nematodes. As a first field test for this DNA sequence signature-based approach, seasonal fluctuations of nematode assemblages under open canopy (one field) and closed canopy (one forest) were monitored. Fifteen taxa from four feeding guilds (covering ∼ 65% of the free-living nematode biodiversity at higher taxonomical level) were detected at two trophic levels. These four feeding guilds are composed of taxa that developed independently by parallel evolution and we detected ecologically interpretable patterns for free-living nematodes belonging to the lower trophic level of soil food webs. Our results show temporal fluctuations, which can be even opposite within taxa belonging to the same guild. This research on nematode assemblages revealed ecological information about the soil food web that had been partly overlooked.
Ecology and Evolution | 2011
Christian Mulder; Johannes Helder; M.T.W. Vervoort; J. Arie Vonk
Nematodes are presumably the most numerous Metazoans in terrestrial habitats. They are represented at all trophic levels and are known to respond to nutrient limitation, prey availability, and microbial resources. Predatory nematodes reside at the highest trophic level, and as such their feeding habits could have a major impact on soil food web functioning. Here, we investigate the effects of gender and developmental stage on the nematode body sizes in coarse and loamy soils. Besides Neodiplogasteridae, our predators are much larger than other soil-dwelling nematodes from their early developmental stage onwards. From juvenile to adult, the predatory Aporcelaimellus (Kruskal–Wallis P < 0.001), Dorylaimoides, and Tripyla (both P < 0.01) show great length increases during their developmental growth, in contrast to their possible prey (almost all P < 0.001). Less than 4% of the prey exceeds the length of the predatory adults, but more than 30% of the prey exceeds the length of the predatory juveniles. Potential body size ratios and some physical problems experienced by small fluid feeders attacking large prey are discussed in an attempt to summarize different prey-searching mechanisms and aggregative predatory responses in the soil system.
PLOS ONE | 2017
M.H.M. Holterman; Akbar Karegar; Paul Mooijman; Hanny van Megen; Sven van den Elsen; M.T.W. Vervoort; C.W. Quist; Gerrit Karssen; Wilfrida Decraemer; Charles H. Opperman; David McK. Bird; Jan E. Kammenga; Aska Goverse; Geert Smant; Johannes Helder
Plant parasitism has arisen time and again in multiple phyla, including bacteria, fungi, insects and nematodes. In most of these organismal groups, the overwhelming diversity hampers a robust reconstruction of the origins and diversification patterns of this trophic lifestyle. Being a moderately diversified phylum with ≈ 4,100 plant parasites (15% of total biodiversity) subdivided over four independent lineages, nematodes constitute a major organismal group for which the genesis of plant parasitism could be mapped. Since substantial crop losses worldwide have been attributed to less than 1% of these plant parasites, research efforts are severely biased towards this minority. With the first molecular characterisation of numerous basal and supposedly harmless plant parasites as well as their non-parasitic relatives, we were able to generate a comprehensive molecular framework that allows for the reconstruction of trophic diversification for a complete phylum. In each lineage plant parasites reside in a single taxonomic grouping (family or order), and by taking the coverage of the next lower taxonomic level as a measure for representation, 50, 67, 100 and 85% of the known diversity was included. We revealed distinct gain and loss patterns with regard to plant parasitism per se as well as host exploitation strategies between these lineages. Our map of parasitic nematode biodiversity also revealed an unanticipated time reversal in which the two most ancient lineages showed the lowest level of ecological diversification and vice versa.
Soil Biology & Biochemistry | 2014
M.T.W. Vervoort; J. Arie Vonk; Karst M. Brolsma; Wolfgang Schütze; C.W. Quist; Ron G.M. de Goede; Ellis Hoffland; Jaap Bakker; Christian Mulder; Johannes Hallmann; Johannes Helder
Oikos | 2014
C.W. Quist; M.T.W. Vervoort; H.H.B. van Megen; G. Gort; Jaap Bakker; W.H. van der Putten; Johannes Helder
Covering ground: insights into soil ecology by molecular monitoring of nematode assemblages. | 2013
M.T.W. Vervoort
Oikos | 2017
Paula Harkes; Ava Verhoeven; Mark G. Sterken; L. Basten Snoek; Sven van den Elsen; Paul Mooijman; C.W. Quist; M.T.W. Vervoort; Johannes Helder
Archive | 2016
M.H.M. Holterman; Akbar Karegar; P.J.W. Mooijman; W. Decreamer; S.J.J. van den Elsen; M.T.W. Vervoort; C.W. Quist; Gerrit Karssen; Charles H. Opperman; David McK. Bird; Geert Smant; Johannes Helder
Proceedings of the 6th International Congress of Nematology | 2014
Johannes Helder; P.J.W. Mooijman; S.J.J. van den Elsen; H.H.B. van Megen; M.T.W. Vervoort; C.W. Quist; Wim Bert; Akbar Karegar; Gerrit Karssen; W. Decreamer