In the study, funded by AgResearch via the Better Border Biosecurity(external link) collaboration, soil collected from a native forest and an organic orchard was stored separately in cupboards at room temperature for a period of 36 months.
Samples were then taken at regular intervals to see if any nematodes could be recovered from the soil and, if they could, whether they were able to infect plant hosts.
"In the study we used different methods to detect nematodes -- including a water misting technique to draw them out of the soil, and a baiting method -- where we grew white clover and ryegrass plants in pots containing a soil sample," explain the authors.
"One of the PPN we looked at was the root lesion nematode. What we found was that lesion nematodes were able to successfully invade the roots of ryegrass even after 36 months," says AgResearch nematologist Lee Aalders.
"They were also able to produce offspring at 13 months. Interestingly, no PPN were recovered from soil stored beyond the 13th month using the three-day misting technique."
This means that given the right conditions, PPN in soil, which is carried on sea freight, footwear or used machinery, and protected from sun or extreme heat, will survive if they end up near a suitable host plant. This is a result that may not be detected using an extraction test like misting.
For quarantine officials around the world, this result is an important find, as it reinforces the risk associated with soil that, even though it may look sterile, unwanted nematodes may be present and undetected until paired with a suitable host plant.
"In the context of biosecurity, we think that the development of a generic test for plant parasitic nematodes - based around a molecular based bioassay -- would enhance the probability of detection of PPNs and, therefore, prevent unwanted incursions beyond the border."
Earlier this year, another AgResearch study(external link) into the survival rates of various transported soil organisms and published(external link) in Neobiota concluded that biosecurity risks from soil organisms are to increase with declining transport duration and increasing protection from environmental extremes.