Revista de la Sociedad Venezolana de Microbiología
versión impresa ISSN 1315-2556
Resumen
GUEDEZ, Clemencia; CANIZALEZ, Luis; CASTILLO, Carmen y OLIVAR, Rafael. Antagonist effect of Trichoderma harzianum over some strawberry (Fragaria spp) post harvesting fungi pathogens. Rev. Soc. Ven. Microbiol. [online]. 2009, vol.29, n.1, pp.34-38. ISSN 1315-2556.
Soft rotting (Rhyzopus stolonifer) and black rotting (Mucor spp., Aspergillus niger and Pythium spp.) are the most common post harvesting strawberry (Fragaria spp.) diseases, generating great losses. During many years synthetic fungicides have been used to control these pathogens, but their development of resistance to these products has been demonstrated, following to the fact that they represent a potential environmental and human health risk. This has lead to the search of natural alternatives such as the use of vegetal extracts and microbial antagonists, being Trichoderma harzianum the antagonist most widely used as biological control. The purpose of this study was to determine the antagonist effect of T. harzianum over some post strawberry harvesting pathogens and determine their mechanism of action. The strawberry samples were transported to the laboratory in the same packages in which they were sold, and then were placed in germination chambers, controlling humidity to obtain a rapid development of the fungi present in the fruit. We identified the following fungi: Rhyzopus stolonifer, Mucor spp., Penicillium digitatum, Rhizoctonia solani, Aspergillus niger and Phytium spp., which were tested for antagonism, using the T. harzianum. The growth speed of the biocontroller was greater than that of the post harvest fungi (p<0,01) and at 96 hours of incubation the Petri dish was completely covered, and the encounter area between them showed that the action mechanism of the biocontroller was of the mycoparasitic type. T. harzianum turned out to be an excellent in vitro controller of post strawberry harvest fungi
Palabras clave : Biological control; post harvest diseases; mycoparasitism; T. harzianum; antagonism.