Root knot nematodes can be a curse in warm, moist garden soils. Feeding by these minuscule, transparent, work-like creatures inside the root tissue of many crops causes the roots to develop tumour-like growths which retard the flow of water and nutrients through conducting vessels, weakening crops. What to do?
First, enrich your soil with compost. Every time you prepare to sow or plant, work in some organic matter. This encourages naturally occurring beneficial nematodes to predate the pest species;
Next, rotate crops. By changing the botanical group of crops you grow in a plot (or raised bed) you deny hosts for the pest nematodes;
By growing ‘break crops’. Pest nematodes don’t prosper in grass crops, like corn, so they starve;
Lastly, grow and use bio-fumigant crops correctly. It is a myth that planting mustard or Tagetes next to crops eliminates nematodes. They don’t. The CSIRO has proven how they do work. You grow and then dig in bio-fumigant crops, like Stinking Roger (Tagetes minuta), marigolds (T. patula and T. erecta) and mustard (Brassica juncea, and others). If the soil is kept damp for three weeks after digging the crops in, the decaying green waste releases isocyanate gases which fumigate soil, killing the nematodes and their cysts (nematode eggs). If the soil dries out, the remedy does not work.
By applying all four strategies I am enjoying picking clean, healthy ‘Rainbow’ silverbeet, beetroot ‘McGregor’s Favourite’ and good, old-fashioned mangelwurzel.
I’ve also experimented with a new dish: a vegetarian spring root salad lightly steamed silverbeet mixed with boiled, diced beets, mangelwurzel, potato and yam with fetta cheese, flavoured with a special salad dressing made with home grown lime juice, mustard seed, olive oil and horseradish sauce. Yum!
Click to view slideshow.Jerry Coleby-Williams
30th October 2014
Filed under: Beneficial Fauna, Compost, Current Events, Food Security, Gardening Australia, In Production Today, Organic, Pests, Productive, Q&A, Remedies, Seedsavers, Sustainability, Uncategorized Tagged: Bio-fumigant crops, Break crop, Compost benefits, Crop rotation, Mangewurzel, Nematode control, spring root salad recipe
