Biological control of Rhizoctonia solani in tomatoes with Trichoderma harzianum mutants
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Keywords

bioantagonism
field assays
greenhouse assays
root rot
tomato

How to Cite

1.
Montealegre JR, Valderrama L, Sánchez S, Herrera R, Besoain XA, Pérez LM. Biological control of Rhizoctonia solani in tomatoes with Trichoderma harzianum mutants. Electron. J. Biotechnol. [Internet]. 2010 Mar. 15 [cited 2024 Sep. 18];13(2):0-. Available from: https://preprints.pucv.cl/index.php/ejbiotechnology/article/view/v13n2-6

Abstract

Biocontrol of Rhizoctonia solani in tomatoes cultivated under greenhouse and field conditions was analyzed using the Trichoderma harzianum mutants Th650-NG7, Th11A80.1, Th12A40.1, Th12C40.1 and Th12A10.1 and ThF2-1, respectively. Their innocuousness on tomato cultivars 92.95 and Gondola (greenhouse assays), and on cultivar Fortaleza (field assays) was established. Alginate pellets (1.7 g pellets/L soil) containing c.a1 x 105 colony forming units (cfu)/g pellet were applied to a soil previously inoculated with R. solani at transplant (greenhouse) or to a naturally infected soil (field). Controls considered parental wild strains, a chemical fungicide and no additions. Th11A 80.1, Th12A10.1 and Th650-NG7 prevented the 100% mortality of tomato plants cv. 92.95 caused by R. solani, and the 40% mortality in tomato plants cv. Gondola (greenhouse assays). Mortality reduction was reflected in canker level lessening and in plant parameters increases (development, fresh and dry weights). A different degree of susceptibility of tomato plants was observed, being Gondola cv. more resistant than 92.95 cv. to infection in a soil previously inoculated with R. solani. Tomato plants of cv. Fortaleza did not show mortality in naturally infected soils (field assays), where the mutant ThF2-1 reduced significantly the canker level caused by R. solani.

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