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Seaweeds for Cotton Phytopathogens management
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Medical Microbiology & Diagnosis

ISSN: 2161-0703

Open Access

Seaweeds for Cotton Phytopathogens management




Kitherian Sahayaraj

Crop Protection Research Centre,St. Xavier’s College, India

Keynote: J Medical Microbiology & Diagnosis

Abstract :

Marine macroalgae mainly include different plant species of red (Rhodomelacea), brown (Phaeophyceae) and green (Chlorophyceae) algae. These macroalgae have not been often regarded as an underutilized bioresource. In agriculture, these plants have been utilized as amendments as bio fertilizers, plant growth regulators and biopesticides. Literature survey reveals that some of the renowned activities are reported from the brown algae for tomato pathogenic fungi, tobacco mosaic virus, cotton wilt and angular leaf spot. Our results showed crude extracts, chlorophyceae (Caulerpa scalpelliformis, Caulerpa veravalensis, Ulva fasciata and Ulva lactuca) species were found to inhibit Cotton wilt causing phytopathogen Fusarium Oxysporum f.sp. Vasinfectum (FOV) in dose-dependent manner whereas ochrophyta (Padina pavonica and Sargassum wightii) species did not show any fungicidal activity against FOV. All extracts of caulerpa veravalensis were active among them the chloroform extract was highly active at 0.4% whereas 0.8% of hexane and methanol extracts were active against Xanthomonas Axonopodis pv. Malvacearum (XAM). The chloroform extracts of C. scalpelliformis and Padina pavonica; methanol extracts of U. fasciata and U. lactuca were effective against XAM but their activity was not significantly pronounced, as compared to commercial product, bacterimycin. The gracilaria corticata tannin extract significantly suppressed the growth of Fu. oxysporum (< 90%) than turbinaria ornata, stoechospermum marginatum (=90%), sargassum wightii, gracilaria fergusonii, chaetomorpha medica, ulva lactuca and Spatoglossum asperum at 8% concentration. Stoechospermum marginatum showed higher growth inhibition activity to Xanthomonas malvacearum than chaetomorpha medica, sargassum wightii, gracilaria corticata, spatoglossum asperum, ulva lactuca, turbinaria ornata, and gracilaria fergusonii. Emulsifiable concentrations (ECs) were prepared and utilized for cotton phytopathogens in Tamil Nadu, India.

Biography :

Kitherian Sahayaraj, Ph.D., D.Sc., is an Professor (Associate) and Head at the Department of Zoology, St. Xavier’s College of Manonmaniam Sundaranar University and a Director in the Crop Protection Research Centre in the same institution since the June 1998. Sahayaraj Kitherian received his undergraduate, post-graduate and doctoral educations at the Madurai Kamaraj University, India. Over the past 31 years, Dr. Sahayaraj’s research efforts have been dedicated to multidisciplinary, integrated approaches to understanding how reduviids distribute and diversify in various ecosystems, and how their adaptive characters can be applied to pest management, especially through biointensive pest management. Dr. Sahayaraj has over 210 scientific papers published. He is an internationally recognized expert in many areas of advanced entomology including insect chemical ecology, artificial diet formulation, biopesticide formulation, biointensitve integrated pest management, bionanomaterial, and insect molecular biology.

E-mail: ksraj48@gmail.com

 

Google Scholar citation report
Citations: 14

Medical Microbiology & Diagnosis received 14 citations as per Google Scholar report

Medical Microbiology & Diagnosis peer review process verified at publons

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