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A Nematode Gel to Protect Crops in Africa and Asia

The fall armyworm is a destructive corn pest that recently arrived in Africa and Asia from the Americas and began causing major yield losses and increased use of insecticides, which pose environmental and human health risks.

Entomopathogenic nematodes are soil-dwelling roundworms that can parasitize and kill fall armyworms with no risks to people or the environment, but application can be tricky because the nematodes are susceptible to desiccation and UV radiation from sunlight.

Patrick Fallet and colleagues report success using an innocuous biodegradable gel made from carboxymethyl cellulose that protects nematodes and keeps them hydrated. The study is published in the journal PNAS Nexus.

In  in Rwanda, the gel system, which was developed by the authors, outperformed a commercial liquid nematode formulation and the insecticide cypermethrin. When applied to the whorl of the corn plant three to four times throughout the season, the nematode gel decreased caterpillar infestation by about 50% and yielded an additional ton of maize (corn) per hectare.

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