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RESEARCH ARTICLE

Biochemical characteristics of Trichoderma atroviride associated with conidium fitness for biological control

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Pages 189-205 | Received 04 Jul 2015, Accepted 20 Aug 2015, Published online: 04 Nov 2015
 

ABSTRACT

Effects of abiotic factors during production (temperature, nutrients, water activity, pH) on conidium fitness (quantity and quality) of Trichoderma atroviride LU132 (a key biocontrol agent) were studied. Conidia from the culturing regimes which resulted in greatest and least bioactivity against Rhizoctonia solani in dual culture assays were selected to assess effects of storage conditions on conidial fitness over time. Further studies assessed interaction effects of temperatures (20°C or 30°C) and sugars (dextrose or sucrose) on conidium germination and bioactivity as fresh conidia, or after 6 months of storage. Biochemical analyses of sugars and fatty acids were carried out to determine relationships between quality variations and cellular characteristics for conidia produced in different culturing conditions. Low trehalose content in conidia (e.g. at 20°C) was associated with the least conidium fitness, although high trehalose content did not necessarily support conidium fitness. High proportions of total fatty acids in conidia were mostly associated with the least conidium fitness. When Trichoderma was grown at high carbon to nitrogen ratio (e.g. at C:N 160:1), the total conidium fatty acids content increased. This study also indicated that the monosaccharide dextrose is metabolically optimal for T. atroviride LU132 at 20°C while the disaccharide sucrose is optimal at 30°C. These studies indicate that physical growth conditions and nutritional requirements attribute in conidium fitness of T. atroviride LU132, and provide important knowledge supporting optimum production of biocontrol agents based on T. atroviride, and possibly other similar biocontrol agents.

Acknowledgement

Mr D. Saville gave advice on experimental design and statistical analyses.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Supplemental Data

Supplemental data for this article can be accessed here: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/09583157.2015.1086312.

Additional information

Funding

This study was completed as part of research funded by the New Zealand Ministry of Business, Innovation and Employment ‘Biological control Products’ programme (C10X 0706).

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