Zina Ahmed Khalaf from Department of Plant Protection successfully defended his Ph.D. work with the title “Study of the Geographical Distribution of Root-Knot Nematode Species in Some Tomato Fields, the Susceptibility of Certain Cultivars to Infection, and Their Control”.
The study aimed to determine the distribution and population density of root-knot nematode species in selected tomato fields, to classify these species morphologically and molecularly, and to evaluate the susceptibility of certain tomato cultivars to infection.
The researcher recommended expanding the use of molecular diagnostic techniques to achieve more accurate and rapid identification of root-knot nematode species compared to traditional morphological diagnosis. She also recommended conducting further studies on local and imported tomato cultivars to select those that are more resistant and better adapted to Iraq’s environmental conditions.

You May Also Like

Food Science Team Wins Agricultural Engineering College League

“The College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences Holds an E-Marketing Training Workshop.”

College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences Hosts Iranian Delegation from Al-Nasir Group of Companies

College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences Participates in the Fifth International Agricultural Conference

College of Agricultural Engineering Holds Workshop on Dragon Fruit

Rural women- Workshop

International Scientific Symposium on Sustainable Applications of Smart Agriculture and Smart Food Organized by the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences

The College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences organizes a cultural festival about Baghdad

The Postgraduate Admission Plan for the Academic Year 2025-2026

Launch of the College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences International Conference Under the Slogan “Smart Agriculture for Achieving Food Security

Women’s Role in Countering Intellectual Extremism-Workshop

Pioneering Scientific Achievement: College of Agricultural Engineering Sciences Successfully Cultivates Rare Iraqi Fungal Strains

Comments are disabled.