Increased Growth of Plants in the Presence of the Biological Control AgentTrichoderma harzianum
- 1 January 1986
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Scientific Societies in Plant Disease
- Vol. 70 (2) , 145-148
- https://doi.org/10.1094/pd-70-145
Abstract
The potential of Trichoderma harzianum to induce increased growth of various floricultural and horticultural crops was determined. In raw soil containing the fungus, pepper seed germinated 2 days earlier than untreated controls. Steamed or raw soil infested with T. harzianum hastened flowering of periwinkle, increased the number of blooms per plant on chrysanthemums, and increased the heights and weights of other plants [petunia, tomato, cucumber, bean and radish were also tested for growth responses]. Responses occurred consistently at population densities of T. harzianum higher than 105 colony-forming units per gram of soil when the fungus was applied either in conidial suspensions or in a peat-bran mixture. Such population densities can be achieved economically by applying the agent to propagative beds, where rooted cuttings (e.g., chrysanthemum) may carry over adequate numbers of thallus units to ensure favorable growth responses after transplanting.This publication has 4 references indexed in Scilit:
- Biological Control Effects of a New Isolate ofTrichoderma harzianumonPythium aphanidermatumPhytopathology®, 1984
- Degradation of plant pathogenic fungi by Trichoderma harzianumCanadian Journal of Microbiology, 1982
- Isolation and Biocontrol Potential ofTrichoderma hamatumfrom Soil Naturally Suppressive toRhizoctonia solaniPhytopathology®, 1981
- Factors Affecting Suppressiveness toRhizoctonia solaniin SoilPhytopathology®, 1979