Title
Biocontrol of cocoa pod diseases with mycoparasite mixtures
Date Issued
01 January 2001
Access level
metadata only access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Publisher(s)
Academic Press Inc.
Abstract
Five native mycoparasitic strains of Clonostachys rosea and three of Trichoderma spp. were isolated from healthy cocoa tissue or basidiocarps of Crinipellis perniciosa using a baiting technique. They were compared singly or in combination with the commercial biocontrol agent Trichoderma virens (SoilGuard) for their potential to control three cocoa pod diseases: moniliasis, caused by Moniliophthora roreri; witches' broom, caused by C. perniciosa; and black pod, caused by Phytophthora palmivora. All isolates except Trichoderma T-1 inhibited basidiocarp formation of C. perniciosa under controlled conditions. The remaining isolates except Trichoderma T-3 reduced vegetative broom formation in a seedling bioassay. Clonostachys rosea G-3 and Trichoderma strains T-2 and T-3 significantly reduced symptoms caused by M. roreri in a seedling bioassay. Host-range studies identified P. palmivora as most susceptible to mycoparasitism and M. roreri as most resistant; C. perniciosa was intermediate. Different degrees of susceptibility were discovered at the pathogen strain level, especially for P. palmivora. However, broad host-range mycoparasites which attacked all three pathogen species were identified. Under field conditions, all selected treatments except a combination of C. rosea G-2 + G-3 reduced moniliasis, the main disease, significantly by 14.6-24.9% as compared with optimized, cultural control alone. No significant reduction of witches' broom or black pod was achieved but a combination of five C. rosea strains (G-1, G-2, G-3, G-4 + G-5) performed consistently best against all three diseases simultaneously. Yield increased by 16.7% and net returns by 24%. Control of moniliasis and yield were positively correlated to the number of mycoparasites in the inoculum. The results suggest that simultaneous biocontrol of the three major cocoa pod diseases with mycoparasite mixtures is highly promising. Future development strategies are discussed. © 2001 Academic Press.
Start page
149
End page
158
Volume
22
Issue
2
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Biología celular, Microbiología
Agricultura, Silvicultura, Pesquería
Subjects
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-0034799311
Source
Biological Control
ISSN of the container
10499644
DOI of the container
10.1006/bcon.2001.0956
Source funding
CICAD-OAS
Sponsor(s)
The authors gratefully acknowledge funding by the USDA-ARS, managed by CABI Bioscience. A starting grant was provided by CICAD-OAS. UNAS provided the SoilGuard. The authors want to thank their colleagues at CABI Bioscience, UNAS, and USDA-ARS for their support and useful discussion, especially the efforts of Enrique Arévalo, Carol Ellison, Harry Evans, Joanne Harvey, Prakash Hebbar, Keith Holmes, and Robert Lumsden. The IMI fungal collection identified Clonostachys rosea. Gary Samuels tentatively allocated the undescribed Trichoderma T-3 to T. cf. longipilis. Their help is gratefully acknowledged.
Sources of information:
Directorio de Producción Científica
Scopus