[
1969]
In order to study properly the nutrition and culture of nematodes, it is desirable to establish the organisms in axenic culture. Only in this way can the metabolic abilities of the nematodes be separated from those of coexisting and interacting organisms. One may settle for a mono-axenic culture, but the best way to attain this is to obtain axenic nematodes and then add the second organism or tissue, for example, alfalfa callus tissue for plant parasitic nematodes (Krusberg, 1961). This chapter will devote itself, in the main, to recent work on the culture and nutrition of nematodes, free-living and parasitic, and will refer only in passing to work already thoroughly reviewed (Dougherty et al., 1959; Nicholas, et al., 1959; Dougherty, 1960).