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Articles

DIRECT TESTING OF ZINGIBER CASSUMUNAR AND CURCUMA COMOSA CRUDE EXTRACTS ON SPORE GERMINATION OF COLLETOTRICHUM SPP. ENABLED BY A SOLUBILIZER, HYDROGENATED CASTOR OIL

Article number
973_22
Pages
165 – 171
Language
English
Abstract
Herb extracts are considered to be an alternative plant disease control approach instead of using chemical fungicides.
However, their water insoluble characteristic generally is a problem in direct testing of the hostile effects of plant crude extracts on fungal spore germination in vitro.
In our experiment, a high concentration of 40,000 or 50,000 ppm stock solution of herb crude extracts dissolved in 20% (w/w) hydrogenated castor oil enabled the further preparation of the tested concentrations by dilution.
The solubilizer was not only safe, but also enhanced normal spore germination.
Enabled by hydrogenated castor oil, detection of the hostile effects of ethanol or hexane extracts obtained from Zingiber cassumunar and Curcuma comosa on Colletotrichum capsici and C. gloeosporioides was accomplished.
Spore germination of both species (13 isolates) was clearly inhibited by 25,000 ppm Z. cassumunar ethanol crude extract.
The hostile effect was significant, resulting in dendroid or swollen germ tubes on both Colletotrichum species isolated from chilli anthracnose, and extreme suppression of germination of C. gloeosporioides isolated from mango fruit anthracnose.
For C. comosa, the hostile effect was indicated by germination with failure of appressorium formation.
Spore germination of C. capsici (5 isolates) was strongly inhibited by ethanol crude extract at 5,000 and 10,000 ppm, and by hexane crude extract at 10,000 ppm.

Publication
Authors
U. Farungsang, N. Farungsang
Keywords
postharvest diseases, chilli, mango, anthracnose, Plai, Wan-chak-motluk
Full text
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