Abstract

Date palm root rot disease is one of the most important diseases of date palms and offshoots. It is caused by many soil-borne pathogenic fungi. Pathogenicity assays of the isolated fungi showed that the major causative agents of root rot disease in date palm plantlets were Fusarium oxysporum Schlecht. emend. Snyder & Hansen, F. proliferatum (Matsush.) Nirenberg ex Gerlach & Nirenberg S1, F. proliferatum S2, Gibberella fujikuroi (Sawada) Wollenw., and Rhizoctonia solani J.G. Kühn. The most virulent fungus was F. oxysporum with a severity index of 82.16 % of root rot, while R. solani was the least harmful with a disease severity rate of 12.42 %. In laboratory tests, Bacillus subtilis reduced the radial mycelial growth of F. oxysporum on PDA medium by 86.6 %. The application of B. subtilis in combination with F. oxysporum substantially inhibited the severity of root rot disease relative to plantlets treated with only F. oxysporum. In addition, B. subtilis application in the presence or absence of F. oxysporum improved the plant physiology of plantlets, including total chlorophyll, total carotenoid, antioxidant enzyme levels (catalase and peroxidase), and total proline content.

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