Evento
Determination of the incidence of grey mould on grapes of San Juan, Argentina after applying different concentrations of naturally occurring antagonist yeasts
Nally, Maria Cristina
; Pesce, Virginia Mercedes
; Toro, Maria Eugenia; Castellanos, Lucia Ines
; Vazquez, Fabio
Tipo del evento:
Congreso
Nombre del evento:
VI Congreso Argentino de Microbiología General
Fecha del evento:
21/10/2009
Institución Organizadora:
Sociedad Argentina de Microbiología General;
Título del Libro:
Libro de resúmenes del VI Congreso Argentino de Microbiología General
Editorial:
Sociedad Argentina de Microbiología General
Idioma:
Español
Clasificación temática:
Resumen
Introduction: Botrytis cinerea is a major pathogen of grape. At present, control in conventional agriculture is mainly achieved through chemical strategies, which can also have many disadvantages, such as the public‟s growing concern for the human health conditions and the environmental pollution. One promising alternative to pesticides is the biological control, numerous studies indicated that some yeast species are ideal biocontrol agents, as they are natural plant epiphytic colonizers, nonpathogenic to plants and human beings in most cases and can rapidly proliferate. It has been reported that biological control was only effective when high concentrations of antagonist yeasts were applied. Objective: The aim of the present work was to study the efficacy of different concentrations of antagonistic yeasts in reducing the development of B.cinerea. Materials and Methods: A- Microorganisms: The pathogen B.cinerea was isolated from infected grapes. All yeast antagonists (15 strains of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and 1 of Schizosaccharomyces pombe) were originally isolated from grape surfaces and fermenting musts. They were selected because of their ability to control B.cinerea on grapes, screening them in vitro and in vivo. B- Tests on fruit: Biocontrol effectiveness was assessed on Red Globe grapes. The fruits were artificially wounded and inoculated with yeasts (10 5, 106 and 107 UFC/ml) and conidial suspension of B.cinerea (104 conidia/ml). Each sample, constituted by 9 berries and reproduced with three replicates for each yeast isolate, was incubated for 5 days at 25°C in a plastic box under high relative humidity (100%). After storage, the incidence of disease was analyzed in percentage and these were arcsin- transformed to angular data prior to ANOVA. Results: There were significant negative relationships between concentration of the antagonists and disease incidence (R2: range on 0.75 to 0.99). The efficacy was higher when a concentration 107 CFU/ml of antagonist was used. When yeast cell suspensions of 8 strains of S.cerevisiae (BSc5, BSc49, BSc81, BSc92, BSc121, BSc140, BSc175 and BSc203) and S.pombe BSc167 reached a concentration of 107 CFU/ml, no infection by B.cinerea was found in fruits treated. Two strains of S.cerevisiae: BSc49 and BSc140 were able to inhibit mycelial growth of grey mould when a concentration of 10 6 CFU/ml of yeasts was inoculated. Conclusions: The concentrations of antagonist had significant effects on biocontrol effectiveness: the higher the concentration of yeast the better biocontrol activity of the antagonist had. When yeast was at 10 7 CFU/ml, the best control was obtained and this concentration was lower than those reported by other investigators.
Palabras clave:
Grey mould
,
Grapes
,
San Juan
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Eventos(PROIMI)
Eventos de PLANTA PILOTO DE PROC.IND.MICROBIOLOGICOS (I)
Eventos de PLANTA PILOTO DE PROC.IND.MICROBIOLOGICOS (I)
Citación
Determination of the incidence of grey mould on grapes of San Juan, Argentina after applying different concentrations of naturally occurring antagonist yeasts; VI Congreso Argentino de Microbiología General; Córdoba; Argentina; 2009; 63-63
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