Abstract

Trichoderma species are widespread filamentous fungi in soils, on plant roots and decaying plant residues. Due to their strong competitiveness and mycoparasitic activity against other fungi, particular strains of Trichoderma sp. are used in agriculture as biocontrol agents against plant pathogens. Commercial products based on strains of T. harzianum or T. afroharzianum have been applied to control Rhizoctonia spp., Fusarium spp. and Phytophthora spp. in various crops. In 2018, however, severe infections of Trichoderma on maize ears were recorded for the first time in a field in Southern Germany. Infected maize cobs were sampled, the fungus was isolated in pure culture and preliminary identified microscopically as Trichoderma harzianum. After silk channel inoculation in the greenhouse, ear rot disease of high severity was observed. In addition to fungal colonization, the dry matter content in cobs was significantly reduced compared to water inoculated cobs. In 2018 and 2019, a total of 13 T. harzianum isolates from maize cobs and maize stalks were isolated and tested, for pathogenicity on maize plants in the greenhouse, compared to several reference isolates. Four isolates proved to be highly aggressive, two biocontrol isolates, Trichodex (T39) and strain T12, induced slight infection and eleven isolates were non-pathogenic. After sequencing the translation elongation factor 1α (tef-1α), the four highly aggressive isolates were assigned to T. afroharzianum, while the commercial biocontrol isolates Trichodex (T39) and T12, as well as the other non-pathogenic strains belonged to T. harzianum, T. atroviride or T. tomentosum. This, to our knowledge, is the first report on Trichoderma sp. as a pathogen causing ear rot disease in maize in Europe with the potential to incite significant yield losses. We therefore propose to name this disease as ‚Trichoderma ear rot on maize‘.

Highlights

  • Members of the genus Trichoderma are classified as imperfect fungi in the division Ascomycota and are ubiquitous in various types of soil

  • A molecular phylogenetic analysis was performed with thirteen Trichoderma isolates from maize cobs and six isolates obtained from fungal culture collections, based on partial tef1α (Figure 1) and internal transcribes spacers (ITS) (Supplementary Figure 1)

  • Isolates designated as T. harzianum clustered in two separate groups highly supported by bootstrap values

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Members of the genus Trichoderma are classified as imperfect fungi in the division Ascomycota and are ubiquitous in various types of soil. (Popiel et al, 2014) They can thereby control and antagonize a broad range of economically important plant parasitic pathogens (Ferrigo et al, 2014; Gupta et al, 2014; Harman, 2015). They may increase plant resilience against drought conditions and promote shoot and root growth (Arora et al, 2003). Apart from the control of root and foliar pathogens, Trichoderma spp. enhance nutrient solubilization and uptake as well as root and root hair development (Herrera-Estrella and Chet, 2004; Schuster and Schmoll, 2010)

Objectives
Methods
Results
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call