Back to Search Start Over

Effect of formulation on the rhizosphere competence and biocontrol ability of Trichoderma atroviride C52

Authors :
K.L. McLean
Hayley J. Ridgway
J. S. Hunt
J. Swaminathan
Alison Stewart
Chris Frampton
Source :
Plant Pathology. 54:212-218
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Wiley, 2005.

Abstract

The rhizosphere competence of the biological control agent Trichoderma atroviride isolate C52 was studied on onion roots both in the glasshouse and in the field when introduced into soil in a range of formulations. Proliferation of T. atroviride in the rhizosphere was formulation-dependent. A pellet formulation maintained the fungal concentration at 105 cfu per g soil, whereas solid-substrate and seed-coating formulations gave concentrations of 104 and 101 cfu per g soil, respectively. To facilitate rhizosphere-competence studies, a UP-PCR band profile generated with primer L45 for isolate C52 was used to enable conclusive identification of T. atroviride C52 when recovered from soil. When isolate C52 was introduced into Sclerotium cepivorum-infested soil as both pellet and solid-substrate formulations, there was no statistically significant difference in the disease control between these treatments, but the pellet treatment doubled the percentage of healthy plants compared with the control treatment.

Details

ISSN :
13653059 and 00320862
Volume :
54
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Pathology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0e59849b2c01b3ee081067a170396753