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Identifying Rates of Meadowfoam (Limnanthes alba) Seed Meal Needed for Suppression of Meloidogyne hapla and Pythium irregulare in Soil

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Title Identifying Rates of Meadowfoam (Limnanthes alba) Seed Meal Needed for Suppression of Meloidogyne hapla and Pythium irregulare in Soil
Names Erşahin, Yurdagul Şimşek (creator)
Weiland, Jerry E. (creator)
Zasada, Inga A. (creator)
Reed, Ralph L. (creator)
Stevens, J. Fred (creator)
Date Issued 2014-09 (iso8601)
Note To the best of our knowledge, one or more authors of this paper were federal employees when contributing to this work. This is the publisher’s final pdf. The published article is copyrighted by the American Phytopathological Society and can be found at: http://apsjournals.apsnet.org/loi/pdis.
Abstract Meadowfoam (Limnanthes alba) is a commercial oilseed annual crop
grown in Oregon. After extracting oil from seed, the remaining seed
meal is rich in the secondary plant metabolite glucolimnanthin, which
can be converted into pesticidal compounds such as 3-methoxybenzyl
isothiocyanate (ITC) and 3-methoxyphenylacetonitrile (nitrile) in the
presence of the enzyme myrosinase. In previous studies, we demonstrated
that ITC and nitrile, produced by mixing freshly ground meadowfoam
seed with meadowfoam seed meal, are toxic to the plant-parasitic
nematode Meloidogyne hapla and the plant pathogen Pythium
irregulare. In this study, we evaluated factors that might influence the
implementation of meadowfoam seed meal into agricultural production
systems for soilborne pathogen and nematode control. Rate-finding
experiments demonstrated that a minimum 1.0% seed/seed meal formulation
(wt/wt) was necessary to achieve nematode and pathogen
suppression; seed meal alone was insufficient for complete control of
M. hapla and stimulated the growth of P. irregulare. When this 1.0%
seed/seed meal formulation was used, a greater soil amendment rate
was required to cause 100% mortality of P. irregulare (1.0% wt/wt)
than for M. hapla (0.5% wt/wt). In phytotoxicity experiments, soil
amended with the 1.0% seed/seed meal formulation was consistently
phytotoxic to wheat, cucumber, and tomato. However, phytotoxic
effects were mitigated by a delayed planting into the amended soil. A
final assay to monitor concentrations of ITC and nitrile in conjunction
with assessing M. hapla and P. irregulare mortality was conducted
over a 6-day period in soils amended at 0.5 and 1.0% (wt/wt) with the
1.0% seed/seed meal formulation. The response was rapid, with 100%
mortality of both organisms within 2 h after exposure to amended soil.
Concentrations of nitrile remained relatively constant over the 6-day
period (approximately 0.017 and 0.032 mg/ml at 0.5 and 1.0% amendment
rates, respectively), whereas ITC production increased rapidly
and peaked 12 to 24 h after amendment (0.083 and 0.171 mg/ml at 0.5
and 1.0% amendment rates, respectively) before returning to near
undetectable levels.
Genre Article
Identifier Erşahin, Y. S., Weiland, J. E., Zasada, I. A., Reed, R. L., & Stevens, J. F. (2014). Identifying Rates of Meadowfoam (Limnanthes alba) Seed Meal Needed for Suppression of Meloidogyne hapla and Pythium irregulare in Soil. Plant Disease, 98(9), 1253-1260. doi:10.1094/PDIS-09-13-0967-RE

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