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Bacteria Antagonistic to <i>Pseudomonas tolaasii</i> and their Control of Brown Blotch of the Cultivated Mushroom <i>Agaricus bisporus</i>
48
Citations
5
References
1972
Year
BiologyMycologySpore BiologyIndustrial MycologyFresh PeatBrown BlotchMushroom FarmPathologyPlant PathologyMicrobial EcologyPseudomonas TolaasiiFungal BiologyMicrobiologyBacteria AntagonisticPublic HealthMedicineFungal Pathogen
S ummary : Pseudomonas tolaasii was isolated from casing peat of healthy and diseased mushroom beds, compost of diseased mushroom beds and from soils round a mushroom farm. It was not isolated from fresh peat or compost from healthy mushroom beds. Three bacteria antagonistic to Ps. tolaasii were isolated from soil and peat. These were a nonfluorescent Pseudomonas sp. (closest to Ps. multivorans ) from soil; and strains of Ps. fluorescens and Enterobacter aerogenes from peat. When the antagonists and the pathogen were added in the ratio of 8 × 10 7 : 10 6 cells/ml to unsterilized peat and applied to mushroom trays, infection of mushroom sporophores by the pathogen was effectively controlled. In vitro studies failed to show lysis or growth inhibition of Ps. tolaasii by the antagonists.
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