Abstract

Restricted usage of chemical nematicides has led to development of environmentally safe alternatives. A culture filtrate of Aspergillus niger F22 was highly active against Meloidogyne incognita with marked mortality of second-stage juveniles (J2s) and inhibition of egg hatching. The nematicidal component was identified as oxalic acid by organic acid analysis and gas chromatography-mass spectroscopy (GC-MS). Exposure to 2 mmol/L oxalic acid resulted in 100% juvenile mortality at 1 day after treatment and suppressed egg hatching by 95.6% at 7 days after treatment. Oxalic acid showed similar nematicidal activity against M. hapla, but was not highly toxic to Bursaphelenchus xylophilus. The fungus was incubated on solid medium and dried culture was used for preparation of a wettable powder-type (WP) formulation as an active ingredient. Two WP formulations, F22-WP10 (ai 10%) and oxalic acid-WP8 (ai 8%), were prepared using F22 solid culture and oxalic acid. In a field naturally infested with M. incognita, application of a mixture of F22-WP10 + oxalic acid-WP8 at 1,000- and 500-fold dilutions significantly reduced gall formation on the roots of watermelon plants by 58.8 and 70.7%, respectively, compared to the non-treated control. The disease control efficacy of the mixture of F22-WP10 + oxalic acid-WP8 was significantly higher than that of a chemical nematicide, Sunchungtan (ai 30% fosthiazate). These results suggest that A. niger F22 can be used as a microbial nematicide for the control of root-knot nematode disease.

Highlights

  • Plant disease caused by nematode infection is a major problem in crop production

  • The J2 mortality rate was 25.3% at 1.25% culture filtrate and >90% at 2.5–20% culture filtrate at 1 day after treatment (Fig 1A)

  • Our results indicated that exposure to A. niger F22 culture filtrate reduced the rates of J2 viability and egg hatching

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Summary

Introduction

Plant-parasitic nematodes caused annual yield loss estimated at 8.8–14.6% of total crop production [1]. Several management strategies can be applied to control RKNs; chemical nematicides have generally been used. Much research has aimed to identify antagonistic microorganisms and their metabolites with nematicidal activity against RKNs [8,9,10]. This achieved limited success when applied in the field, and few commercial products have been developed and used in agricultural practice [11]. Identification of antagonists for control of plant parasitic nematodes and their commercialization are necessary

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