Results/Conclusions
Mean mortality over the course of one year, the longest period that nematodes have to survive & infect a new cohort of hosts, was identical and low among five of six sites. Further, mortality did not correlate strongly with spatial patterns of moisture or persistence. Sites with high long-term persistence spanned the entire range of moistures and mortality rates. Paradoxically, sites with low persistence experienced the lowest overall mortality. Irrespective of local mortality or moisture, colonization rate strongly predicted long-term persistence. Sites with high persistence also had the highest colonization (mean=0.016, SE = 0.0009, n=14) and extinction rates (mean=0.05, SE = 0.003, n=14). Despite favorable conditions and low mortality other sites were rarely colonized (mean=0.0001, SE= 0.0001, n=14) and experienced very few extinctions (mean=0.015, SE = 0.0001, n=14). The inherent patchiness and metapopulation structure of naturally-occurring EPN populations may be a key to the persistence and stability of EPN-prey interactions