Abstract: | Acidified cupric acetate soaks were tested for eradication of Xanthomonas campestris from naturally infected crucifer seeds. The pathogen was eradicated from seeds by soaking in 0.5% cupric acetate dissolved in 0.005 N acetic acid for 20 min at 35, 40, 45, and 50°C but not 25°C. Moreover, normal bacterial flora of crucifer seeds and the seed-borne Phoma lingam and Alternaria spp. were reduced by 95, 92, and 81%, respectively, after the cupric acetate treatment at 40°C. The seed germination percentage was generally reduced, but the amount of reduction depended upon the treatment temperature and plant cultivar. At 50°C, less than 50% of the seed of all 12 cultivars tested germinated, whereas at 40°C more than 50% of the seeds of most cultivars germinated. Treating seeds in cupric acetate at 40°C should prove useful for eradicating X. campestris from seeds of breeding lines and stock seed used for hybrid seed production. Furthermore, a significant reduction in total bacterial flora and seed-borne fungi suggests the usefulness of the treatment for other microorganisms associated with other seeds or foodstuffs. |