Beneficial effects of indigenous cotton rhizobacteria on seed germinability, growth promotion and suppression of bacterial blight disease


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Authors

  • K.K. MONDAL, R.P. SINGH and J.P. VERMA Division of Plant Pathology, Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi 110012

Keywords:

Cotton, rhizobacteria, Pseudomonas fluorescens. biocontrol, Xam

Abstract

Five, out of forty-two, cotton rhizobacteria (CRb) were selected for intensive studies on the basis of their in vitro antagonistic activity towards the most predominant and virulent race-32 of Xanthomonas axonopodis pv. malvacearum, the inducer of bacterial blight of cotton. These five isolates were identified as Pseudomonas fluorescens (CRb-26 and CRb-39), Pseudomonas putida (CRb-17) and Pseudomonas alcaligenes (CRb-9 and CRb-14). Isolate CRb-26 was most effective in inhibiting the growth of Xam.Treatment of cotton (cv. Acala 44) seeds with CRb-26 (107 cfu/ml) increased the germination of cotton (Acala-44) seeds by 12.82% and improved the development of normal seedlings by 22.58%. Application of CRb-26 on Xam inoculated seeds resulted in maximumimprovement in germination with a concomitant reduction in cotyledonary infection in comparison with the other rhizobacterial isolates tested. CRb-26 heavily colonized the cotyledons of cotton and caused a drastic reduction in Xam population. Inoculation of CRb-26 to leaves also caused a significant reduction in the disease severity.

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How to Cite

and J.P. VERMA, K. M. R. S. (2002). Beneficial effects of indigenous cotton rhizobacteria on seed germinability, growth promotion and suppression of bacterial blight disease. Indian Phytopathology, 52(3), 228-235. https://epubs.icar.org.in/index.php/IPPJ/article/view/19521