Title of article :
Ability of Moderately Halophilic Bacteria to Control Grey Mould Disease on Tomato Fruits
Author/Authors :
N. SADFI-ZOUAOUI، نويسنده , , B. ESSGHAIER، نويسنده , , M. R. Hajlaoui and A. Boudabbous، نويسنده , , M. L. FARDEAU، نويسنده , , J. L. CAYAOL، نويسنده , , B. OLLIVIER and A. BOUDABOUS، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Abstract :
Tomato is one of the leading crops in Tunisia in terms
of weight consumed (20 kg⁄per person⁄year). Preserving
the quality of the fruit from field to consumer is essential
to successful marketing. Grey mould rot induced
by Botrytis cinerea is an important cause of postharvest
loss depending on season and handling practices.
We describe here the ability of halotolerant to moderately
halophilic bacteria isolated from different
Tunisian Sebkhas (hypersaline soils) to protect freshmarket
tomato fruits from B. cinerea. The tomatoes
tested were at two different stages of ripening, (i)
mature-green and (ii) red. Six strains significantly
reduced growth of the pathogens from 67% to 87%.
The effectiveness of these antagonists was also confirmed
on green tomatoes; in which the fruit rot
protection rate ranged from 74% to 100%. The antagonists
were characterized by morphological, biochemical
and physiological tests as well as 16S rDNA
sequencing. The halotolerant effective isolates were
identified as belonging to one of the species Bacillus
subtilis (M1-20, J9) or B. licheniformis (J24). One effective
moderately halophilic isolate (M2-26) was identified
as Planococcus rifietoensis. These strains are a
source of hydrolytic enzymes such as chitinases, proteases,
laminarinases, amylases, lipases and cellulases.
For comparison, 12 halotolerant or moderately halophilic
strains obtained from DSM culture collection
were also evaluated for their antifungal activity against
B. cinerea on tomato fruits. The most effective strains
were Halomonas subglaciescola, Halobacillus litoralis,
Marinococcus halophilus, Salinococcus roseus, Halovibrio
variabilis and Halobacillus halophilus with a percentage
of grey mould rot reduction ranging from
71% to 97%. Inoculation of mature-green tomatoes
by the bacterial antagonist of Halobacillus trueperi
resulted in no disease development. Our results indicate
that the use of halotolerant to halophilic microorganisms
should be helpful in reducing grey mould
disease of stored tomatoes
Keywords :
Biocontrol , Botrytis cinerea , grey mould , bacterial characterization , hydrolytic enzymes , Halophilic bacteria , Tomatoes , postharvest diseases
Journal title :
Journal of Phytopathology
Journal title :
Journal of Phytopathology