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Biological Control of Microbial Plant Pathogens

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Plants can become 'sick' due to some infectious agent, such as fungi, bacteria, ... Binab_T, RootShield, T-22G, T-22 Planter Box, Bio-Trek), Supresivit, Trichodex, ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Biological Control of Microbial Plant Pathogens


1
Biological Control of Microbial Plant Pathogens
  • Introduction to the Microbial World of Biological
    Control
  • Ent 447/547, Fall 2005
  • http//www.agls.uidaho.edu/ent547biocontrol/
  • wchun_at_uidaho.edu
  • AgBiotech 109/TLC 231
  • 5-5708/5220

2
Plant Disease
  • Plants can become "sick" due to some infectious
    agent, such as fungi, bacteria, nematodes, or
    viruses.
  • In some instances insects and vascular plants may
    be considered as plant pathogens.
  • These agents are capable of infecting plants
    and disrupting their normal functioning,
    resulting in disease.
  • Thus, Plant Disease is considered to be the
    abnormal physiological response of a plant to the
    chronic association with a primary causal agent.

3
Plant Disease Expression
  • Diseased can be manifested in many ways.
  • Blemishes, or lesions, on the leaves, stems,
    flowers, or fruit.
  • Reductions in growth
  • Loss of color loss or abnormal growth of leaves,
    flowers, or fruit.
  • Browning or dieback of leaves and shoots
    wilting.
  • Death of the plant.
  • Organisms that cause disease in plants generally
    do not cause disease in humans or animals.
  • The science of studying diseases of plants, their
    causes, effects, and control, is called Plant
    Pathology.

4
Plant Pathogens
  • Bacteria
  • Fungi
  • Insects
  • Nematodes
  • Viruses
  • Weeds

Stemphylium fruit spot of papaya caused by
Stemphylium lycopersici
Photograph courtesy W. T. Nishijimafrom the
Compendium of Tropical Fruit Diseases
Plant Damage destruction of plant tissue due to
a single, non-recurring event.
5
Fungal Etiology of Late Blight Identified1853 -
Anton de Bary firmly established the fungal
etiology of plant disease. Describes
Phytophthora infestans as the causal agent of the
Irish Potato Famine. Went on to describe the
etiology of many other important diseases of the
time.
6
Similarities and Differences (Insect, Plant,
Microbial)
  • Similarities
  • Employs many of the same principles of biological
    control for insects and plants.
  • Best success with integrative use of control
    agents.
  • Utilizes parasites.
  • Utilizes conservation, augmentation, and
    importation.
  • Differences
  • Employs ecological management at the microbial
    level.
  • Uses competitors, tricksters and parasites.
  • Usually focuses more on conservation and
    augmentation rather than importation.

7
Challenges Facing Microbial Agents
8
The Nature and Practice of Biological Control of
Plant Pathogens Baker and Cook
  • Favor the Antagonist
  • Adding Amendments - antagonist stimulation
  • Alter pH
  • Tillage - modify soil structure or aeration
  • Planting date selection escape
  • Apply organic amendments increase background
    flora
  • Add antagonists
  • Trick the Pathogen
  • Crop Rotation - lower inoculum density
  • Trap plants
  • Irrigation Practices

9
EPA Biopesticides
  • Microbial Pesticides
  • Plant-Incorporated Protectants (PIPs)
  • Biochemical Pesticides

10
Microbial Pesticideshttp//www.epa.gov/pesticides
/biopesticides/
  • Microbial pesticides  consist of a microorganism
    (e.g., a bacterium, fungus, virus or protozoan)
    as the active ingredient. Microbial pesticides
    can control many different kinds of pests,
    although each separate active ingredient is
    relatively specific for its target pests. For
    example, there are fungi that control certain
    weeds, and other fungi that kill specific
    insects.

11
Plant-Incorporated Protectants (PIPs) (EPA)
  • PIPs used to be called Plant-pesticides are
    pesticidal substances that plants produce from
    genetic material that has been added to the
    plant. For example, scientists can take the gene
    for the Bt pesticidal protein, and introduce the
    gene into the plants own genetic material. Then
    the plant, instead of the Bt bacterium,
    manufactures the substance that destroys the
    pest. Both the protein and its genetic material
    are regulated by EPA the plant itself is not
    regulated.

12
Biochemical Pesticides
  • Biochemical pesticides Biochemical pesticides are
    naturally occurring substances that control pests
    by non-toxic mechanisms. Conventional pesticides,
    by contrast, are generally synthetic materials
    that directly kill or inactivate the pest.
    Biochemical pesticides include substances, such
    as insect sex pheromones, that interfere with
    mating, as well as various scented plant extracts
    that attract insect pests to traps. Because it is
    sometimes difficult to determine whether a
    substance meets the criteria for classification
    as a biochemical pesticide, EPA has established a
    special committee to make such decisions.

13
Early Microbial Biological Control was Accidental
The Aztecs were a warring people who came to the
central valley of Mexico around 1200 AD from the
southwestern United States
14
Aztec Microbial Biological Control
  • According to legend, a special sign from the gods
    would show them the site for their new
    settlement. This would be an eagle with a serpent
    in its mouth, perched on a large cactus. Sometime
    around 1325, they saw such an eagle on an island
    in the middle of a lake and settled there. This
    site, where Mexico City is located today, became
    the center of the Aztec world
  • Tenochtitlán.

15
Aztec Microbial Biological Control
  • By 1519, an estimated 200,000 people lived in
    Tenochtitlán
  • Had developed an agricultural system farming
    adjacent marshy but rich land
  • Built floating islands of dirt piled on bound
    weeds, surrounded by canals, fertilized with
    aquatic weeds and animal manure

http//www.xochimilco.df.gob.mx/turismo/chinampas.
html
16
Aztec Microbial Biological Controlhttp//www.silv
ervizion.com/lewis/aztecs/content/foodfarm/chinamp
as.htm
17
Vile Concoctions for Tree Wounds
  • Nectria galligena a fungus, European Apple
    Canker
  • Austen, 1657 - treat fresh pruning wounds with
    cow dung and urine to prevent apple canker

Twig canker
18
Vile Concoctions for Tree Wounds
  • Forsyth, 1791 - fresh cow dung, lime, wood ashes,
    and sand
  • Le Berryais, 1785 - fresh mud
  • MacDonald et al., 1979 - soil applied to American
    chestnut caused Endothia parasitica cankers to
    heal - Trichoderma sp.?

19
The Discovery of Antibiotics Was A Turning Point
In Biotechnology and Plant Pathology
  • Roberts, W. 1874
  • Penicillium broth inhibitory to bacteria
  • Antibiotics, antibiosis
  • Sir Alexander Fleming, 1928, penicillin
  • Most of the antibiotics discovered since then are
    from soil saprophytic microorganisms

20
Biological Control With Microbes First Described
  • Hartley, 1921
  • Autoclaved soil with Pythium debaryanum nearly
    100 pine seedling death
  • Non-sterile soil P. debaryanum 38.5
    damping-off.
  • Added Phoma, Chaetomium, Rhizopus, Trichoderma,
    Aspergillus, Rosellinia, Penicillium - 11
    damping-off.
  • Mixed non-sterile soil and 13 microorganisms
    together, 16.9 damping-off.

21
Second Direct Application
  • Millard and Taylor, 1927
  • Common scab of potatoes, Streptomyces scabies
  • Added green grass cuttings and Streptomyces
    praecox in sterilized soil in pot tests
  • Starving out

22
Still on History
  • Sanford and Broadfoot, 1931 - first used
    Biological Control in plant pathology
  • 40 bacteria, 24 fungi
  • Organisms or culture filtrates in sterile soil
  • Found organisms more effective against
    Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici

23
First Demonstration of a Toxin from a BC Agent
  • Weindling, 1931 to 1941
  • Trichoderma viride antagonistic to soil pathogens
  • Purified viridin, gliotoxin (Gliocladium virens)
  • 1/300,000 dilution active against Rhizoctonia
    solani

24
Suppressive Soils
  • Reinking and Manns, 1933
  • Central America soils
  • Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense - Panama
    disease of banana
  • Pathogen isolated from sandy soil but not from
    clay soils
  • Sandy soil plantings last 10 years (conducive)
  • Clay soil planting last 20 years (suppressive)

25
Suppressive Soils Have a Microbiological Reason
  • Gerlagh, 1968
  • 4 successive crops in soil increased suppression
    of Gaeumannomyces graminis var. tritici
  • Steaming destroys antagonists

26
Biological ControlA Microbiologists Perspective
  • Pest suppression with biological agents operating
    in a background of integrated control that does
    not depend on host resistance, sterilization of
    the target pathogen, or modification of pest
    behavior

27
Biological Control Mechanisms
  • Competition
  • Antibiosis
  • Parasitism
  • Induced resistance
  • Disease agent transfer

28
Microbial Control Results inA Microbiologists
Perspective
  • Destruction of the propagative units or biomass
    of the pathogen
  • Prevention of inoculum formation
  • Weakening or displacement of the pathogen in
    infested residue
  • Reduction of vigor or virulence of the pathogen
    by agents such as mycoviruses or hypovirulence
    determinants
  • Nothing

29
Agrobacterium radiobacter Galltrol-A, Nogall,
Diegall, Norbac 84C Bacillus subtilis Epic,
Kodiak , Rhizo Plus , Serenade , System_3
Burkholderia cepacia Intercept Pseudomonas
fluorescens BlightBan A506, Conquer, Victus
Pseudomonas syringae Bio-save100, Bio-save 110
Streptomyces griseoviridis Mycostop
Ampelomyces quisqualis AQ10 Candida oleophila
Aspire Coniothyrium minitans Contans , KONI
Fusarium oxysporum Biofox C, Fusaclean
Gliocladium virens SoilGard Gliocladium
catenulatum PreStop, Primastop Phlebia
gigantea Rotstop, P.g. Suspension Pythium
oligandrum Polygandron Trichoderma harzianum
and other spp. Bio_Fungus, Binab_T, RootShield,
T-22G, T-22 Planter Box, Bio-Trek), Supresivit,
Trichodex, Trichopel, Trichoject, Trichodowels,
Trichoseal , Trichoderma 2000
30
Reasons Why Biological Control is not Very Popular
  • Wait until something is wrong.
  • Chemicals are faster and less complicated and
    usually give better results.
  • Active grower engagement.
  • Marketing
  • Extension pathology.
  • Decline in interest in ecology.
  • Poor biological control products (haste).

31
Final Points
  • Finding biological control organisms
  • Suppressive soils
  • Old world
  • Plant pathogens
  • Strange and unusual places
  • How do you use microorganisms as BC agents?
  • Application methods
  • In IPM programs
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