Abstract

To control the decay of fresh vegetables or fruits after harvest and overcome higher costs using a natural agent, synergistic antifungal effects were studied in tomatoes and their main decay fungi Fusarium solani and Rhizopus stolonifer. After screening 56 groups with a checkerboard method based on 11 natural agents, only one combination of thymol and salicylic acid (STSA) had a synergistic effect on both fungi. Their average minimal inhibitory concentration (MIC) values decreased significantly to 0.43 fold compared with the single agents tested. Their mycelial growth was completely inhibited; the inhibition rates of spore germination exceeded 96% at 0.5, 1, and 2 MIC. The protective and therapeutic effects were found to be dose-dependent during exposure; the former was always better than the latter against both fungi at any tested concentration in wound-inoculated tomatoes, and phytotoxicity occurred only when the concentration of STSA reached 2 MIC in naturally stored fruit. Consumer evaluation showed that the natural, non-inoculated tomatoes treated with 1 MIC and the wound-inoculated tomatoes treated with 2 MIC were both acceptable. The in vitro and in vivo results show that a combination of thymol and salicylic acid could be developed as a control measure and could reduce costs.

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