Nacobbus aberrans

Last updated

Nacobbus aberrans
Scientific classification OOjs UI icon edit-ltr.svg
Domain: Eukaryota
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Nematoda
Class: Secernentea
Order: Tylenchida
Family: Pratylenchidae
Genus: Nacobbus
Species:
N. aberrans
Binomial name
Nacobbus aberrans
(Thorne, 1935)
Synonyms

Anguillulina aberrans
Pratylenchus aberrans
Nacobbus batatiformis
Nacobbus serendipiticus
Nacobbus serendipiticus bolivianus

Nacobbus aberrans is a plant pathogenic nematode.

Related Research Articles

<i>Tapinoma</i> Genus of ants

Tapinoma is a genus of ants that belongs to the subfamily Dolichoderinae. The genus currently comprises 74 described species distributed worldwide in tropical and temperate regions. Members of are generalized foragers, nesting in a wide variety of habitats, ranging from grasslands, open fields, woodlands, to inside buildings. The majority of species nest in the ground under objects such as stones or tree logs, other species build nests under bark of logs and stumps, in plant cavities, insect galls or refuse piles.

Ductuli aberrantes are two long narrow tubes, the ductulus aberrans inferior and the ductulus aberrans superior. The ductulus aberrant inferior, is occasionally found connected with the lower part of the canal of the epididymis, or with the commencement of the vas deferens.

<i>Cadulus</i> Genus of molluscs


Cadulus is a large genus of small tusk shells in the family Gadilidae. It contains over fifty-one described species.

Nacobbus dorsalis, the false root-knot nematode,) is a plant pathogenic nematode.

<i>Drosera aberrans</i> Species of plant

Drosera aberrans is a perennial tuberous species in the genus Drosera that is native to New South Wales, South Australia, and Victoria. It grows in a rosette 3 to 5 cm in diameter with green, orange-yellow, or red leaves. It is native to southern inland South Australia, southern and central Victoria, and one single collection from New South Wales. It grows in a variety of soils from sand to laterite gravel and limestone clay in mallee woodland, heathland, and open forests. It flowers from July to September.

<i>Tonestus</i> Genus of plants

Tonestus, common name serpentweed, is a genus of North American flowering plants in the family Asteraceae.

<i>Triniteurybia</i> Genus of flowering plants

Triniteurybia aberrans, the Idaho goldenweed, is a species of flowering plant in the tribe Astereae within the family Asteraceae. It is the only species in the genus Triniteurybia.

Littoraria aberrans is a species of sea snail, a marine gastropod mollusc in the family Littorinidae, the winkles or periwinkles.

<i>Aberrasine aberrans</i> Species of moth

Aberrasine aberrans is a moth in the family Erebidae first described by Arthur Gardiner Butler in 1877. It is found in China, Korea, Russia, Japan and Taiwan.

<i>Euphaedra aberrans</i> Species of butterfly

Euphaedra aberrans, the aberrant Themis forester, is a butterfly in the family Nymphalidae. It is found in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Ghana. The habitat consists of forests.

Bougainvillia aberrans is a marine invertebrate, a species of hydroid in the suborder Anthomedusae. It was first described by Dale Calder in 1993. They have four radical clusters of marginal tentacles. Bougainvillia aberrans is found in Bermuda in the western North Atlantic Ocean.

<i>Myrmecia aberrans</i> Species of ant endemic to Australia

Myrmecia aberrans is an Australian bull ant of the genus Myrmecia. It is mostly spotted in South Australia and the states surroundings. The species of the bull ant was first described in 1900. The average length is around 12 millimetres. M. aberrans ants are commonly known as "wide jawed bull ants".

James Erwin Böhlke (1930–1982) was an American ichthyologist. From 1954 to 1982, he was curator of the Department of Ichthyology at the Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia.

Drasteria aberrans is a moth of the family Erebidae. It is found in central Asia.

<i>Nacobbus</i> Genus of roundworms

Nacobbus is a genus of plant-parasitic nematodes. Prevalent in North and South America, the genus Nacobbus threatens crops such as tomato, potato, quinoa and sugarbeet. They can cause so much damage that they are considered to be of quarantine importance. The morphology and biology of Nacobbus is not all that well known, although it is possible that the host—in this case, a specific crop—influences how the morphological characteristics of these nematodes are expressed.

Pachycondyla aberrans is an extinct species of formicid in the ant subfamily Ponerinae known from a single fossil found in Russia.

Fusarium aberrans is a fungus species of the genus Fusarium in the Nectriaceae family and Hypocreales order.

Medetera aberrans is a species of long-legged fly in the family Dolichopodidae. It is distributed in Eastern North America. Adults of the species are generally colored a metallic green, with yellow legs. Not much is known about the biology of the species, but adults have frequently been collected from wet grasslands or marshes.

Colletes aberrans is a species of hymenopteran in the family Colletidae. It is found in North America.

Acronychia aberrans, commonly known as acid berry, lemon aspen, plasticine tree or plasticene aspen, is a species of medium-sized rainforest tree that is endemic to north-eastern Queensland. It has simple leaves on stems that are more or less square in cross-section, flowers in small groups in leaf axils and fleshy, more or less spherical fruit.

References