Title of article
Bacterial endophytes: Bacillus spp. from annual crops as potential biological control agents of black pod rot of cacao
Author/Authors
Rachel L. Melnick، نويسنده , , Nina K. Zidack، نويسنده , , Bryan A. Bailey، نويسنده , , Siela N. Maximova، نويسنده , , Mark Guiltinan، نويسنده , , Paul A. Backman، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
Pages
11
From page
46
To page
56
Abstract
Diseases are the most important factors limiting production of Theobroma cacao in South America. Because of high disease pressure and environmental concerns, biological control is a pertinent area of research for cacao disease management. In this work, we evaluated the ability of four Bacillus spp. isolated from vegetable crops, for their ability to colonize T. cacao seedlings and reduce the severity of black pod rot (Phytophthora capsici). Of the Bacillus spp. tested, application of B. cereus isolates BT8 (from tomato) or BP24 (from potato) together with the polysilicon surfactant Silwet L-77 (0.24% vol/vol) resulted in long-term (>68 days) stable colonization of cacao leaves. Further investigation revealed that foliar colonization by BT8 and BP24 was primarily epiphytic, with endophytic populations typically representing 5–15% of total foliar bacteria. Significant reductions of disease severity (P less-than-or-equals, slant 0.05) on cacao leaf disks challenged with P. capsici were recorded from after day 26, and through 68 days following colonization with BT8. No bacterial colonists were observed in or on leaves that developed after bacteria application, suggesting that the bacteria were not capable of systemic movement through vascular tissues. These newly developed, non-colonized leaves from colonized plants exhibited disease suppression, which supports a probable disease suppression mechanism of induced systemic resistance for the BT8 isolate.
Keywords
Theobroma cacao , Bacillus , Biological control , Induced systemic resistance , Phytophthora capsici , pathogen
Journal title
Biological Control
Serial Year
2008
Journal title
Biological Control
Record number
721676
Link To Document