Root damage from Pratylenchus penetrans causes economic losses in many crop
s. Rotation with poor or non-hosts is a control method that can reduce the
use of fumigant nematicides. Short-term experiments were conducted to ident
ify potential non-host sorghum and miller hybrids. In a field experiment, f
orage pearl millet (Pennisetum glaucum L. 'CFPM 101'), grain pearl miller (
'CGPMH-1'), grain sorghum (Sorghum bicolor L. 'CGSH-7') and rye (Secale cer
eale L. common) were grown in rotation with tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum L. '
Delfield'), a known intolerant host. One rye treatment was fumigated prior
to tobacco planting in 1998. P. penetrans numbers were lower in forage and
grain pearl millet plots than in grain sorghum or rye plots in the year of
planting. In the subsequent tobacco crop year, root nematode counts in plot
s where forage and grain pearl millet were grown were similar to counts in
fumigated rye plots and lower than counts in plots where non-fumigated rye
and grain sorghum were grown. Tobacco leaf yield was negatively correlated
with soil nematode counts from November 1997 to July 1998 (r = -0.48, P = 0
.0001), as well as with root counts from July 1998 to September 1998 (r = -
0.40, P = 0.0015). This is the first report of P. penetrans suppression by
P. glaucum in the field. Further investigation of nematode suppression by p
earl miller lines and development of this potentially sustainable farming s
ystem is warranted.