
Second stage juveniles hatch from the egg and develop through the third and fourth stages to the adult. After being fertilized by a male, a female lays up to 10 eggs a day within the host tissue and up to 500 eggs during a lifetime. The life cycle takes from 19 to 23 days on onions at 15C. The short life cycle and the large number of eggs laid by the female can result in a characteristically rapid and dramatic population increase that can be as much as a thousandfold during one season.
Because all juvenile and adult stages are vermiform, they are capable of normal nematode movement. An economically important feature of the stem and bulb nematode is its ability to survive repeated desiccation or drying. The fourth stage juvenile is especially adapted to survive desiccation. Dried fourth stage juveniles can be found as whitish clumps attached to dried stems, bean seeds, bulbs, cloves, and other infested dried plant parts. This ability facilitates survival during adverse conditions and acts as a means of dispersal for the nematode. Dry nematodes can be reactivated by moisture when infested material is replanted or when a new crop is planted in soil containing old, infested material.
Infection by Ditylenchus dipsaci causes twisting, distortion, and discoloration of stems and foliage of plants such as alfalfa and ornamentals. Ditylenchus dipsaci may produce multiple crowns in sugarbeet and increased tillering in oats. A common symptom on a variety of crop plants caused by D. dipsaci is swelling of tissues on the lower stem region aboveground, close to the root crown or bulb. Crown rot, a common feature of D. dipsaci infection on sugarbeets, is a result of secondary infection by bacterial or fungal organisms. Bulbs infected with D. dipsaci sometimes show discoloration or browning of one or more of the leave sheaths surrounding the bulb, visible in cross-section. Advanced infections of stem nematode on garlic will cause a discoloration and rotting of the base of the bulb area, and the root plate can be easily separated from the bulb.
	Ditylenchus dipsaci	on	alfalfa, healthy on left	
	Ditylenchus dipsaci	on	garlic	
	Ditylenchus dipsaci	on	daffodil, pointing to spikkles	
	Ditylenchus dipsaci	on	daffodil, spikkles on leaves	
	Ditylenchus dipsaci	on	alfalfa	
	Ditylenchus dipsaci	on	chive	
	Ditylenchus sp.	on	iris	
	Ditylenchus destructor	on	iris	
	Ditylenchus destructor	on	potato	
	Ditylenchus dipsaci	on	daffodil	
	Ditylenchus dipsaci	on	garlic	
	Ditylenchus dipsaci	on	garlic	
 
From: McKenry, M.V. and P. A. Roberts. 1985. Phytonematology Study Guide. University of California, Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources. Publication Number 4045.
