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1.
Several antioxidants namely ascorbic acid, salicylic acid, sodium benzoates, thiouria and catechol were used as seed treatment and foliar spraying to reduce the incidence of root and pod rot diseases of peanut caused by (Fusarium oxysporum, Fusarium solani and Fusarium moniliforme) as well as to determine of phenolic compounds and oxidative enzymes in the treated plants. Each antioxidant was used at different concentrations (2, 4, 6 and 8 mM) against tested pathogenic fungi in vitro. All antioxidants at 8 mM showed the greatest reduction of mycelial growth of the pathogens. In greenhouse experiments, treated seeds (Giza 5 cv.) or foliar spraying of peanut plants after 30 and 60 days from planting date with each antioxidant at 8 mM reduced severity of both diseases. The treated plants with antioxidants increased accumulation of phenolic compounds and activity levels of oxidative enzymes (catalase, peroxidase and polyphenoloxidase) in infected plants compared to healthy plants.

http://zoobank.org/urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:AF539C90-4B38-4BFE-B77B-5F2A5D764D7A  相似文献   


2.
Wang  D.  Kurle  J.E.  Estevez de Jensen  C.  Percich  J.A. 《Plant and Soil》2004,258(1):319-331
Soybean root rot, caused primarily by Fusarium solani f. sp. phaseoli in a complex with F. oxysporum and Rhizoctonia solani, has become an increasing problem for soybeans, dry beans, and other rotation crops in central Minnesota due to soil conditions associated with reduced tillage. This study was conducted, in two field sites in central Minnesota located near Staples and Verndale, to develop methods for nondestructive assessment of root rot severity using plant radiometric properties. Soybean canopy reflectance was measured with a hand-held multi-spectral radiometer. Prior to the radiometer measurements, attempts were made to create differing root rot situations with moldboard or chisel tillage, and with or without a biological seed treatment. Root rot severity was estimated using a visual disease severity scale. Colony-forming units (CFU) were determined to estimate soil populations of pathogenic F. solani and F. oxysporum. Results from the Verndale site consistently showed significant treatment effects in the measured canopy radiometric parameters, and in the visual disease rating and yield (significant for seed treatment). Values of a simple ratio vegetation index from this site exhibited negative relationships with disease rating and F. oxysporum CFU, and a positive linear relationship with yield. Treatment effects were generally not significant at the Staples site because of low initial F. oxysporum populations. The results indicate that remote sensing is potentially a rapid, nondestructive means for assessment of root rot diseases in soybean.  相似文献   

3.
Glomus mosseae and the two pod rot pathogens Fusarium solani and Rhizoctonia solani and subsequent effects on growth and yield of peanut (Arachis hypogaea L.) plants were investigated in a greenhouse over a 5-month period. At plant maturity, inoculation with F. solani and/or R. solani significantly reduced shoot and root dry weights, pegs and pod number and seed weight of peanut plants. In contrast, the growth response and biomass of peanut plants inoculated with G. mosseae was significantly higher than that of non-mycorrhizal plants, both in the presence and absence of the pathogens. Plants inoculated with G. mosseae had a lower incidence of root rot, decayed pods, and death than non-mycorrhizal ones. The pathogens either alone or in combination reduced root colonization by the mycorrhizal fungus. Propagule numbers of each pathogen isolated from pod shell, seed, carpophore, lower stem and root were significantly lower in mycorrhizal plants than in the non-mycorrhizal plants. Thus, G. mosseae protected peanut plants from infection by pod rot fungal pathogens. Accepted: 10 February 2000  相似文献   

4.
Abstract

Fusarium species are known to play a role in several diseases of cotton including the seedling disease complex, wilt, and boll rot. Therefore, a mycoflora study was conducted in 1998 in order to identify Fusarium species found in association with cotton roots. A total of 109 samples of cotton seedlings infected with post-emergence damping-off or rotted roots of adult plants were obtained from different cotton-growing areas in Egypt. Forty-six isolates were recovered and were identified as follows: F. oxysporum (28 isolates), F. moniliforme (9), F. solani (6), F. avenaceum (2), F. chlamydosporum (1). F. oxysporum, F. moniliforme and F. solani, the dominant species, accounted for 60.9%, 19.6% and 13% of the total isolates, respectively in 1998. F. oxysporum showed the highest isolation frequency in Beharia and Minufiya while F. moniliforme showed the most isolation frequency in Minufiya and Gharbiya. F. oxysporum was one of the major taxa of the Fusarium assemblage from Giza 70. F. oxysporum showed the most frequently isolated fungus in May while F. moniliforme and F. solani were the most frequently isolated fungi in August. Isolation frequency of Fusarium spp. during July and August was significantly greater than that of April or June. This implies that cotton roots are subjected more to colonization by Fusarium spp. as plants mature. Regarding pathogenicity, of the 46 isolates of Fusarium spp. tested under greenhouse conditions, 38 isolates (82.4%) were pathogenic to seedlings of Giza 89. This study indicates that F. oxysporum and F. moniliforme are important pathogens in the etiology of cotton damping-off in Egypt.  相似文献   

5.
The effects of co‐inoculation of Rhizoctonia solani and Colletotrichum lindemuthianum or Uromyces appendiculatus at different inoculum levels were studied on the disease dynamics and on the growth of bean plants under greenhouse conditions. Bean seeds were sown in R. solani‐infested soil. Additional experiments in which seedlings were transplanted to infested soil were also carried out. Conidial suspensions of C. lindemuthianum or uredospores of U. appendiculatus were inoculated onto leaves at plant developmental stages V2 and V3, respectively. Interactions between root rot and the aerial diseases were observed depending on the inoculum levels and on the timing of R. solani inoculation. Anthracnose severity tended to be higher on R. solani‐infected plants. Conversely, R. solani infection significantly reduced diameter of pustules and rust severity. When seedlings were transplanted to soil infested with low levels of R. solani, root rot severity and density of R. solani in the soil were magnified at high levels of C. lindemuthianum or U. appendiculatus. In these experiments, a synergistic interaction between root rot and anthracnose was observed to affect the plant dry weight. Antagonistic effects on the plant dry weight were found for the combination root rot/rust only when seeds were sown in infested soil.  相似文献   

6.
Five Fusarium species were recovered from the rhizoplane of healthy and damped-off cotton, pea, tomato, maize and wheat seedlings raised in the field during a 12-month experiment: F. solani, F. oxysporum, F. moniliforme, F. acuminatum and F. equiseti. F. solani and F. oxysporum were the most common species in the rhizoplane of healthy and damped-off seedlings of cotton, pea, wheat and tomato. In the case of maize, they were surpassed by F. moniliforme which was very scarce in the roots of the other test plants. There was some regular periodicity in the occurrence of Fusarium species in the rhizoplane of test plants. F. oxysporum showed its highest records usually in winter months, F. solani usually in moderate and high temperature months, and F. moniliforme, in maize rhizoplane, in winter months.  相似文献   

7.
Conventional tillage methods were compared with no tillage systems for the control of root and stalk rot disease of maize caused by Macrophomina phaseolina and Fusarium moniliforme in a field with a recent history of high stalk rot incidence in south-western Nigeria. The incidence of stalk rot was significantly less under no-tillage practices than in conventionally tilled plots during the twoseason trial. Application of paraquat or burning of crop residue had no apparent influence ond isease incidence. None of the treatments affected the severity of the diseases.  相似文献   

8.
A root rot and wilt disease of Anigozanthos manglesii (Kangaroo Paw) grown in greenhouses in Israel, for exporting as cut flowers to Europe, was characterized. Pythium myriotylum (Drechs.) and Rhizoctonia solani (Kühn) were the prevalent pathogens in diseased plants collected from commercial greenhouses. Fusarium oxysporum, Fusarium spp. and Myrothecium sp. were also isolated, but P. myriotylum or R. solani were not detected in samples from symptomless plants in tissue cultures (Australian origin) or plants at different stages in the nursery; non‐pathogenic F. oxysporum and Fusarium spp. were detected in several samples. In pathogenicity tests carried out in pots, plant mortality occurred 7 days after inoculation with P. myriotylum. In a field experiment carried out in methyl bromide‐fumigated soil, the incidence of dead plants following inoculation with P. myriotylum alone was 22% 10 days after inoculation, increasing to 78% after an additional 25 days. The incidence of dead plants following inoculation with R. solani alone was only 5% and in plants inoculated simultaneously with both pathogens, disease incidence was 88% 35 days after inoculation. Mortality reached 90–100% in plants inoculated with P. myriotylum, either singly or combined with R. solani 60 days after inoculation, whereas in plants inoculated with R. solani it was 5%. The maximum mortality in plants inoculated with R. solani was 25%, 76 days after inoculation. These results clearly demonstrate that P. myriotylum was the dominant pathogen in the root rot and wilt of A. manglesii.  相似文献   

9.
Rhizoctonia solani isolates used in this investigation were identified as anastomosis-4 (AG-40), collected from different localities from Assiut governorate in Egypt. Pathogenicity test of seven isolates of R. solani was evaluated on soybean Giza 111 cultivar under greenhouse conditions. All tested isolates were able to infect soybean plants causing root rot with different degrees of severities, isolate No. 1, 2 and 3 showed significantly highest root rot severity, while isolate No. 5 gave the lowest percentage of root rot rating. The sodium dodecyl sulphate polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis patterns were used to compare three isolates of R. solani. There are no variations among R. solani isolates except a few exceptions according to their protein patterns. DNA markers obtained from all isolates showed genetic similarity among different isolates obtained from different geographical regions barring few exceptions. Correlation between DNA patterns of R. solani isolates and their virulence was detected, but no correlation with anastomosis groups (AG).  相似文献   

10.
Plant growth-promoting bacteria-mediated biocontrol of plant pathogens is renowned to enhance the growth of the plants using different direct or indirect mechanisms. The goal of the present investigation was the evaluation of Pseudomonas aeruginosa Z5 isolated from cotton grown in Pakistani soils for the suppression of Fusarium oxysporum associated with cotton seedling disease. In dual culturing techniques, four bacterial strains inhibited fungal pathogens, i.e. F. oxysporum, Fusarium moniliforme, Fusarium solani and Rhizoctonia solani, significantly with percent inhibition ranging from 25% to 91.5%. P. aeruginosa Z5 showed maximum suppression of all the tested pathogens. Net-house experiments showed that the application of P. aeruginosa Z5 both separately and in combination with Bacillus fusiformis S10 significantly reduced the disease incidence by suppressing F. oxysporum (the causal agent of cotton seedling disease) up to 64–65% and improved the percent germination as compared to the infected control plants. The production of antibiotics, proteases and siderophores may be the contributing factors for its antagonistic properties. Highest bacterial population (8.9 CFU/g root) observed on roots of cotton plants inoculated with P. aeruginosa Z5 showed its good colonisation aptitudes even in the presence of high inoculation of soil with F. oxysporum. Confocal laser scanning microscopy supported the root colonisation of cotton plants with fluorescently labelled P. aeruginosa Z5. Because of innate fungicidal potential, growth promoting P. aeruginosa Z5 can be used as a bioinoculant and an antagonist to suppress the growth of cotton root-associated fungal pathogen.  相似文献   

11.
For this study, 21 isolates of fungi belonging to Rhizoctonia and Fusarium genera were isolated from the diseased faba bean plants, obtained from the different localities in Assiut governorate, showing root rot and wilt symptoms. The isolates proved to be pathogenic on Masr 1 faba bean cultivar under greenhouse conditions. F. oxysporum isolates caused wilt disease; however, the isolates of R. solani and other Fusarium species caused root rot. The virulence of isolates on the tested faba bean cultivar was different. The highly pathogenic isolates of these fungi were employed in this study. The effect of soil amendment with Planta Rich and Rich Composts (CMs) alone or in combination with seed coating by the antagonistic yeast Pichia guilliermondi before sowing on the severity of Rhizoctonia and Fusarium root rot and Fusarium wilt of faba bean was tested under greenhouse and field conditions. The tested isolates of yeast proved to be highly antagonistic to the pathogen in vitro. The test rates of CMs were equivalent to 2, 7, 10 and 14 ton/feddan in the greenhouse and 7 and 10 t/feddan in the field conditions. Uncomposted soil was used as a control. The results showed that the tested CMs have a suppressive effect on the severity of root rot and wilt diseases of faba bean under greenhouse and field conditions. The application of CMs (Planta Rich and Rich) alone at the rates equivalent to 2, 7, 10 and 14 t/feddan in greenhouse and 7 and 10 t/feddan in the field conditions to the soil infested with the tested pathogens reduced percentage of the tested diseases compared with uncomposted soil. Combined CMs treatments with yeast seed treatment increased the suppressive effect of CMs on the disease severity.  相似文献   

12.
To find a potential biocontrol agent against Fusarium sp. in apple seedlings, an endophytic bacterium strain was isolated from apple tree tissues. The inhibitive efficiency of the isolated strain against the hyphal growth of Fusarium sp. and Rhizoctonia solani was tested. Strain Y-1 showed significant inhibitory effects against Fusarium oxysporum, F. moniliforme, F. proliferatum, F. solani and R. solani. Its antifungal activity against F. oxysporum was the highest, reaching up to 64.90 %. In vivo tests indicated that strain Y-1 effectively protects apple from F. oxysporum infections. The control effect reached 92.26 % when bacterial inoculation was performed 3 days prior to pathogen inoculation. Strain Y-1 could colonize the rhizosphere and tissues within 30 days. It was also able to induce systemic resistance in apple seedlings as shown by the activities of SOD and POD. Strain Y-1 significantly increased the root length, root wet and dry weights, and plant height of the apple seedlings compared with the control group. The homology analysis of the 16S rRNA sequence, together with morphological, physical, and biochemical analyses, revealed that strain Y-1 is Bacillus subtilis.  相似文献   

13.
 The individual and combined effects of two arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi (AMF), Meloidogyne arenaria, and phosphorus (P) fertilization, (0, 25, 75, and 125 μg/g soil) on peanut plant growth and pod yield were determined in greenhouse studies. Best growth and yield usually occurred at 75 or 125 μg P regardless of inoculation treatment. Peanut growth and yield were generally stimulated by AMF development, and growth alone was suppressed by M. arenaria at 0 and 25 μg P. In challenge inoculations, VAM increased peanut plant tolerance to the nematode and offset the growth reductions caused by M. arenaria at the two lower P levels. However, VAM and added P increased galling and M. arenaria egg production/g root, thereby increasing peanut susceptibility to nematode attack. M. arenaria had only a minimal effect on root colonization by AMF and sporulation by the fungi. Accepted: 9 June 1995  相似文献   

14.
Incidence of root rot and foliar yellowing, rhizome rot, panicle wilt and stem rot diseases of small cardamom (Elettaria cardamomum Maton) are caused by Fusarium oxysporum Schlecht., and were surveyed in the high ranges of Idukki district, Kerala during 2010–2011. The diseases were noticed in different areas to varying degrees. Root rot was found to be most severe, followed by pseudostem rot, rhizome rot and panicle wilt. The Fusarium infections were prevalent throughout the year (January–December) and varied from 1.5 to 10.6%. Even though the pathogen was isolated from different plant parts, during pathogenicity studies, all the isolates could cross-infect other plant parts too. Twenty different isolates of F. oxysporum were obtained from diseased samples, and five morphologically distinct isolates were analysed with Randomly Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD) markers to study the genetic variability, if any, among them. PCR amplification of total genomic DNA with random oligonucleotide primers generated unique banding patterns, depending upon primers and isolates. Nine oligunucleotide primers were selected for the RAPD assays, which resulted in 221 bands for the five isolates of F. oxysporum. The number of bands obtained was entered into an NTSYS, and the results showed moderate genetic variability among F. oxysporum isolates causing root rot, rhizome rot, panicle wilt and pseudostem rot, collected from different locations. The dendrogram of different isolates into groups resulted in one major cluster at 0.61 similarity index comprising of four isolates (CRT 3, CRR 3, CPW 2 and CSR 1) and one isolate (CRT 5) formed in a separate cluster. Among the five isolates of F. oxysporum, CRT 5 was entirely different from the other four isolates. The isolates also differ according to the geographical area, as revealed from the genetic variability observed in different root rot isolates (CRT 3 and CRT 5). It is inferred that despite moderate variability, F. oxysporum, infecting small cardamom in Idukki district of Kerala, consists of a single clonal lineage.  相似文献   

15.
A survey of 116 districts of nine lentil growing states covering 603 farmers' fields revealed a range of 0.7–9.3% mean plant mortality at reproductive stages in different lentil growing states of the country. The overall mean mortality was 6.3%. The main pathogens found associated with plant mortality at this stage were Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. lentis (62.0%), Rhizoctonia bataticola (25.2%) and Sclerotium rolfsii (9.8%). The minor involvement of 1.8% was that of F. solani, F. chlamydosporum. F. equisetii, and R. solani. For the first time a national scenario of lentil wilt-root rot incidence at the crucial reproductive stage and their associated pathogens is reported here.  相似文献   

16.
Maize kernel samples were collected in 1996 from smallholder farm storages in the districts of Bomet, Bungoma, Kakamega, Kericho, Kisii, Nandi, Siaya, Trans Nzoia, and Vihiga in the tropical highlands of western Kenya. Two-thirds of the samples were good-quality maize, and one-third were poor-quality maize with a high incidence of visibly diseased kernels. One hundred fifty-three maize samples were assessed for Fusarium infection by culturing kernels on a selective medium. The isolates obtained were identified to the species level based on morphology and on formation of the sexual stage in Gibberella fujikuroi mating population tests. Fusarium moniliforme (G. fujikuroi mating population A) was isolated most frequently, but F. subglutinans (G. fujikuroi mating population E), F. graminearum, F. oxysporum, F. solani, and other Fusarium species were also isolated. The high incidence of kernel infection with the fumonisin-producing species F. moniliforme indicated a potential for fumonisin contamination of Kenyan maize. However, analysis of 197 maize kernel samples by high-performance liquid chromatography found little fumonisin B1 in most of the samples. Forty-seven percent of the samples contained fumonisin B1 at levels above the detection limit (100 ng/g), but only 5% were above 1,000 ng/g, a proposed level of concern for human consumption. The four most-contaminated samples, with fumonisin B1 levels ranging from 3,600 to 11,600 ng/g, were from poor-quality maize collected in the Kisii district. Many samples with a high incidence of visibly diseased kernels contained little or no fumonisin B1, despite the presence of F. moniliforme. This result may be attributable to the inability of F. moniliforme isolates present in Kenyan maize to produce fumonisins, to the presence of other ear rot fungi, and/or to environmental conditions unfavorable for fumonisin production.  相似文献   

17.
Soil management practices can affect the population dynamics of soil microbial communities. Cultural practices can be adequately combined to benefit natural populations of microorganisms that may have a role in biological control (actinomycetes, Trichoderma spp., and Gliocladium spp.), thus contributing to the management of peanut fungal soilborne diseases in a sustainable manner within ecological boundaries. During six agricultural cycles, rhizosphere soil samples were taken from a field subjected to crop rotation (soybean, peanut, and maize), peanut being under two tillage systems (no till, reduced tillage) with the aim of quantifying populations of soil microorganisms. The incidence of diseases caused by soilborne fungi in peanut was determined at harvest. The highest amount of actinomycetes, Trichoderma spp., and Gliocladium spp. were recorded when maize was the preceding crop. Regarding tillage systems, the populations of the three groups of microorganisms were higher in peanut under no tillage than under reduced tillage. Under these conditions, the lowest incidence of peanut blight (Sclerotinia minor) and root rot (strains of Fusarium solani) was observed, suggesting a possible natural control of peanut soilborne pathogens. The quantification of actinomycetes, Trichoderma spp., and Gliocladium spp. was used as a tool to explore the impacts of different management systems on microbial groups that may be involved in the biological control of soilborne diseases, with the aim of combining those practices that improve native populations of possible beneficial microorganisms. This manipulation can provide sustainable management strategies in the control of soilborne diseases, avoiding the use of artificial inoculations of microorganisms, and reducing agrochemical application.  相似文献   

18.
One of the economically important diseases of onion is the basal rot caused by various Fusarium species. Identification of the pathogenic species prevalent in a region is indispensable for designing management strategies, especially to develop resistant cultivars. Eighty Fusarium isolates are obtained from red onion bulbs on infected fields of East Azarbaijan province. Inoculating the onion bulbs with 38 selective isolates indicated that 17 isolates were pathogenic on onion. According to the morphological and molecular characteristics, these isolates were identified as F. oxysporum, F. solani, F. proliferatum and F. redolens. This is the first report of F. redolens on onion in Iran. On the other hand, the virulence of each pathogenic isolate was evaluated on onion bulbs and seedlings. F. oxysporum which causes severe rot and damping-off was considered as a highly virulent species in both conditions. While, F. proliferatum was considered as the most destructive on onion bulbs. Rot ability of F. solani was not considerable, and only the 4S isolate caused pre- and post-emergence damping-off more than 50%. Finally, F. redolens with less pathogenicity on onion bulbs was identified as the most virulent isolate on onion seedlings, which was explanatory of its importance on farm.  相似文献   

19.
Six species of Fusarium were identified among approximately 7,000 cultures isolated from roots and soils collected from prairies and cornfields in southern Minnesota. In both soil sources, F. oxysporum and F. solani predominated, followed in order by F. roseum, F. episphaeria, F. tricinctum, and F. moniliforme. The same order was obtained for the 28 species of prairie grasses and forbs as for corn. From prairie plant and corn roots, respectively, F. oxysporum was isolated from 64 and 90%; F. solani, 26 and 80%; F. roseum, 8 and 35%; and F. tricinctum, 6 % each. In 10 of 17 companion soil pairs, populations of Fusarium species were higher in cornfield than in prairie soils. Populations of F. roseum and F. moniliforme especially, were higher in cornfield soils of sample pairs, but populations of F. solani were higher in prairie soils. Fusarium roseum ‘Equiseti’ was the predominant cultivar of this species in both prairie and cornfield soils. Thus all six species of Fusarium appeared to be indigenous to the prairie, and some, especially F. roseum, apparently had increased in prevalence in soil and roots by corn culture.  相似文献   

20.
Fusarium solani (76%),Phyllosticta phaseolina (12%) andAspergillus flavus (10%) were isolated from bean(Phaseolus vulgaris) seeds showing lesions. Out of these the first two caused 30 per cent and 20 per cent seed rotting respectively after artificial seed inoculations. When inoculum was added into the soil before sowing the seed, 35 per cent and 10 per cent pre-emergence rot ocurred and there was 35 per cent and 15 per cent post-emergence blight when soil with healthy seedlings was inoculated withF. solani andP. phaseolina respectively.F. solani caused similar lesions on bean seeds when inoculated after an injury.F. oxysporum was isolated from the roots of dried bean plants showing necrosis.  相似文献   

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