Vol. 42 No. 2 (2003)
Research Papers

Avicennia marina (mangrove) soil amendment changes the fungal community in the rhizosphere and root tissue of mungbean and contributes to control of root-knot nematodes

Published 2003-08-01

How to Cite

[1]
S. Shaukat, I. Siddiqui, and F. Mehdi, “Avicennia marina (mangrove) soil amendment changes the fungal community in the rhizosphere and root tissue of mungbean and contributes to control of root-knot nematodes”, Phytopathol. Mediterr., vol. 42, no. 2, pp. 135–140, Aug. 2003.

Abstract

The effect of soil amendment with Avicennia marina (mangrove) on mungbean growth and mungbean infestation with Meloidogyne javanica was determined in greenhouse pot experiments. Galling and final nematode population densities were reduced by all soil amendments with mangrove. To better understand whether nematode suppression by A. marina was caused directly by the release of nematicidal factor(s) into the soil, or was due indirectly to changes in the fungal community, the diversity of the rhizosphere populations of culturable fungi was assessed before organic amendment (day 0), after decomposition but before seed sowing (day 15) and at harvest (day 73). Thirteen out of 20 fungal species were isolated from both A. marina-amended and unamended soils, the most frequent genera being Alternaria, Aspergillus, Fusarium, Penicillium, Trichoderma, Mucor, Myrothecium and Rhizoctonia. The other seven were found only in amended soils. At different times in the course of the experiment amended and unamended soils differed significantly in the fungi isolated from the rhizosphere and/or in the concentrations of A. marina. Trichoderma viride was isolated only from surface-sterilized mungbean roots grown in amended soils, whereas Chaetomium sp. was isolated only from unamended soils.

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