Concepedia

Publication | Closed Access

Ecological management of tropical sugar beet (TSB) root rot (<i>Sclerotium rolfsii</i>(Sacc.) by rhizosphere<i>Trichoderma</i>species

13

Citations

18

References

2013

Year

Abstract

Trichoderma species are collected from different location of sugarbeet growing areas of Tamil Nadu and it is effective against Sclerotium rolfsii pathogen caused by sugarbeet ecosystems. Out of thirty-one isolates of Trichoderma viride and four isolates of Trichoderma harzianum collected and tested for their antagonistic activity against S. rolfsii by dual culture technique, one isolate was found to be effective T. viride (TVB1) that recorded the maximum (73.03%) inhibition on the mycelial growth recording only 2.40 cm growth as against 8.90 cm in the control. The isolates of T. harzianum THB-1 recorded 71.19% mycelial growth reduction over control. The colonisation behaviour of T. viride (TVB1) revealed that it completely over grew on pathogen within 48 h after interaction with the pathogen, and speed of growth on pathogen was also high and it possesses a higher level of competitive saprophytic ability. The best four isolates of TVB1, TVB-2, TVB-3 and TVB31 and two isolates of T. harzianum THB-1 and THB-2 were compared with other species of Trichoderma longibrachiatum, Trichoderma reesei, Trichoderma koningii and Chaetomium globosum and tested under in vitro condition. BA of neem cake at 150 kg ha−1 + T. viride isolate (TVB1) at 2.5 kg/ha recorded least root rot disease incidence of 17.05% which accounted for 75.37% disease reduction over control and highest recorded maximum root yield 65.73 t ha−1 and increasing sugar content.

References

YearCitations

Page 1