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Biocontrol of fungal root rot diseases of crop plants by the use of rhizobia and bradyrhizobia

Research Authors
S. A. Omarand M. H. Abd-Alla
Research Abstract

Twenty-oneRhizobium andBradyrhizobium strains were testedin vitro against the mycelial growth of three pathogenic fungi on solid and liquid media. All tested rhizobia and bradyrhizobia significantly suppressed the growth of the three soil-borne root-infecting fungi (Fusarium solani, Macrophominia phasolina andRhizoctonia solani) either in the absence or presence of iron. This indicates that the siderophore played a minor role in the biocontrol potential ofRhizobium andBradyrhizobium against pathogenic fungi. Pot experiments revealed that the numbers of propagules causing disease after 4 weeks of planting varied with species and host plant. The three most activeRhizobium andBradyrhizobium strains (R. leguminosarum bv.phaseoli TAL 182,B. japonicum TAL 377 andBradyrhizobium sp. (lupin) WPBS 3211 D) tested under greenhouse conditions for their ability to protect one leguminous (soybean) and two non-leguminous (sunflower and okra) seedlings from root rot caused byFusarium solani, Macrophominia phaseolina andRhizoctonia solani provided significant suppression of disease severity compared with nonbacterized control in both leguminous and non-leguminous seedlings.Bradyrhizobium sp. (lupin) WPBS 3211 D provided the lowest degree of resistance against all the tested pathogens with all host plants.

Research Journal
Folia Microbiologica
Research Member
Research Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
43
Research Website
10.1007/BF02818587
Research Year
1998
Research Pages
431-437