Content area

Abstract

Cyanobacteria - phytopathogenic fungi - tomato plant interactions were evaluated for developing suitable biological options for combating biotic stress (Fusarium wilt) and enhancing plant vigour. Preliminary evaluation was undertaken on the fungicidal and hydrolytic enzyme activity of the cyanobacterial strains (Anabaena variabilis RPAN59, A. laxa RPAN8) under optimized environmental/nutritional conditions, followed by amendment in compost-vermiculite. Such formulations were tested against Fusarium wilt challenged tomato plants, and the Anabaena spp. (RPAN59/8) amended composts significantly reduced mortality in fungi challenged treatments, besides fungal load in soil. Cyanobacteria amended composts also led to an enhancement in soil organic C, nitrogen fixation, besides significant improvement in growth, yield, fruit quality parameters, N, P and Zn content. The tripartite interactions also enhanced the activity of defence and pathogenesis related enzymes in tomato plants. A positive correlation (râ[euro][per thousand]=â[euro][per thousand]0.729 to 0.828) between P content and pathogenesis/defense enzyme activity revealed their role in enhancing the resistance of the plant through improved nutrient uptake. Light and scanning electron microscopy (SEM) revealed cyanobacterial colonization, which positively correlated with reduced fungal populations. The reduced disease severity coupled with improved plant growth/ yields, elicited by cyanobacterial treatments, illustrated the utility of such novel formulations in integrated pest and nutrient management strategies for Fusarium wilt challenged tomato crop.[PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]

Details

Title
Cyanobacteria mediated plant growth promotion and bioprotection against Fusarium wilt in tomato
Author
Prasanna, Radha; Chaudhary, Vidhi; Gupta, Vishal; Babu, Santosh; Kumar, Arun; Singh, Rajendra; Shivay, Yashbir Singh; Nain, Lata
Pages
337-353
Publication year
2013
Publication date
Jun 2013
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V.
ISSN
09291873
e-ISSN
15738469
Source type
Scholarly Journal
Language of publication
English
ProQuest document ID
1364640135
Copyright
KNPV 2013