Revista Caatinga (Jan 2010)

FUNGOS MICORRÍZICOS ARBUSCULARES NO CONTROLE DE Meloidogyne incognita EM MUDAS DE TOMATEIRO

  • CARLA DA SILVA SOUSA,
  • ANA CRISTINA FERMINO SOARES,
  • JOÃO LUIZ COIMBRA,
  • MARLON DA SILVA GARRIDO,
  • GISELE DA SILVA MACHADO

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 23, no. 1
pp. 15 – 20

Abstract

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Mycorrhizal fungi has been shown to affect some species of parasitic nematodes, in many cases reducing oviposition and the number of galls on the root system of infected plants. In order to evaluate the biocontrol potential of arbuscular mycorrhizal fungi to reduce the infectivity of Meloidogyne incognita in tomato plants, an experiment was conducted with a randomized block design with eight replications in a factorial with thefollowing treatments: with and without M . incognita, with presence and absence of fungal species Glomus clarum Nicolson & Schenck, Gigaspora albida Schanck & amp; Smith and Acaulospora scrobiculata Trappe. The fungus G. clarum significantly reduced the gall index (46.4%) and the number of egg mass (78.8%) of the nematode on tomato seedlings. The percentage of root colonization is not in itself an indicator of efficiency in controlling fungal infectivity of M. incognita in tomato plants, since A. scrobiculata exhibited a high degree of colonization (77.6%) and was not effective in controlling nematode reproduction. The species of mycorrhizal fungi differ in efficiency in reducing the infectivity of M. incognita in tomato seedlings.