PLANT PEST
Cyst nematodes of cereals (exotic species)
Exotic to Australia
Features: Exotic species of nematodes (microscopic, worm-like animals) that damage grains, pulses, grasses and vegetables
Where they're from: Europe, Asia, Africa, North America, Central America, South America
How they spread: Importation of infested plants or soil, contaminated machinery and footwear
At risk: Grains (oats, wheat, barley, soybeans, rye, maize, sorghum), pulses (chickpea, lentil, broad bean), grasses and vegetables (carrots, beans, peas, beetroot)
Patchy growth in cereal rye caused by one of the species of cyst nematodes.
Bonsak Hammeraas, Norwegian Institute for Agricultural and Environmental Research, Bugwood.org
Keep them out
Overseas, these cyst nematodes (Heterodera spp.) attack a wide range of grains, pulses and vegetables including carrots, beans and peas. They infest and attack the roots causing wilting and stunting of plants. They can spread easily via infected plants or soil.
Cyst nematodes cause huge economic losses for farmers where the pests live in the soil. One species, H. zeae (corn cyst nematode), is spreading through grain growing areas of the US, ruining crops. Another species, H. glycines (soybean cyst nematode), damages soybeans, causing up to 70 per cent loss of yield in crops in Japan.
These pests pose a significant threat to our agricultural industry and our economy, since cereals, pulses and vegetables are important crops. Soil infested with cyst nematodes may not be suitable for growing these crops. They might also threaten grasses in Australia.
Importing goods
To keep these exotic cyst nematodes out of Australia, never ignore Australia’s strict biosecurity rules.
Before you import, check our Biosecurity Import Conditions system (BICON).
What to look for
In cereals and vegetables:
- yellowing, stunting of plants, poor tillering (production of side shoots), and patchy growth
- thin leaves with a reddish yellow colouring
- damaged roots, often with a knotted appearance due to cysts, or are ropey and swollen
- tiny white cysts on roots, which turn brown as the season progresses.
Where to look
Importers
Infested plants are the most likely ways that cyst nematodes could make it to Australia. They could also enter on machinery and footwear contaminated with infested soil.
Growers and home gardeners
Look for signs of exotic cyst nematodes in:
- grain crops, pulses and grasses
- vegetables, including carrot.
What to do
If you think you’ve found exotic cyst nematodes in crops of grains, pulses, vegetables or grasses:
- take a photo
- do not disturb infected plants (this may be as simple as preventing access to a field).
Seen something unusual? Report it. Even if you’re not sure.