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Articles

Acremonium as an endophytic bioagent against date palm Fusarium wilt

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Pages 1214-1221 | Received 20 Dec 2012, Accepted 23 Dec 2012, Published online: 19 Feb 2013
 

Abstract

A total of 250 endophytic fungal isolates, representing 30 morphotaxa, were isolated and characterised, they were collected from the different living symptomless parts of date palm trees of orchards of six Egyptian governorates. Colonisation was greater in samples from the midrib than in those from laminar tissue and slightly greater at the tip of the lamina compared with the base of the leaf. Acremonium spp. were frequently isolated as date palm root endophytes. Acremonium isolates were screened in Petri dishes to select the highest antagonistic one against an Algerian isolate of Fusarium oxysporum f.sp. albedinis. Two-week-old axenically reared date palm seedlings grown in Petri dishes were directly injected with spore suspension (1.5 × 107 spores/ml) of a pure culture of the virulent antagonistic isolate of Acremonium sp. One week after endophytic colonisation, date palm seedlings were then challenged with the pathogen, Fusarium albedinis. The challenged seedlings exhibited a significant reduction in wilt symptom percentage (by 87.0%), while the seedlings exposed to Fusarial toxin without pathogen exhibited the wilt disease symptoms. This indicates that the endophyte ably depresses any toxic action of F. albedinis. The endophytic fungus was recovered from sites distant from the point of inoculation after six months from the application, indicating that the Acremonium sp. has the potential to move throughout the tissue plant, even the end time of trial. The Acremonium mode of action, as a biocontrol agent, was discussed.

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