Incidence and detection of seed mycoflora of Indian mustard (Brassica juncea L) and their deteriorative effect on plant health


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Authors

  • Sonali Meena Department of Plant Pathology, College of Agriculture (AU, Jodhpur), Nagaur 341001, Rajasthan, India Author
  • S Godika Department of Plant Pathology, SKN Agriculture University, Jobner 303328, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India Author
  • RP Ghasolia Department of Plant Pathology, SKN Agriculture University, Jobner 303328, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India Author
  • SK Bairwa Department of Plant Pathology, College of Agriculture (AU, Jodhpur), Nagaur 341001, Rajasthan, India Author
  • Nisha Nitharwal Department of Plant Pathology, SKN Agriculture University, Jobner 303328, Jaipur, Rajasthan, India Author
  • Sushila Choudhary Department of Plant Pathology, Rajasthan Agricultural Research Institute (SKNAU), Durgapura, Jaipur 302018, Rajasthan, India Author

https://doi.org/10.56093/job.v14i2.

Keywords:

Indian mustard, mycoflora, seed germination, seedling vigour index

Abstract

Sixteen saprophytic as well as parasitic mycoflora belonging to eight genera were recorded in the blotter and agar plate
methods. These were Alternaria brassicae, A. alternata, A. brassicicola, Aspergillus niger, A. flavus, A. nidulans, A.
fumigatus, A. ochraceous, Curvularia lunata, Drechslera tetramera, Rhizopus nigricans, Mucor sp., Penicillum sp.,
Chaetomium sp., Metarrhizium sp. and Fusarium oxysporum. The fungal species recorded in potato dextrose agar plate
method (PDA) test were common to those observed in blotter test but percent incidence of fungi varied in blotter test
and PDA. Sample collected from Alwar showed maximum incidence of mycoflora. Six fungal species belonging to four
genera including A. brassicae were found pathogenic and adversely affect plant status. A. brassicae was found to be
highly pathogenic as it showed maximum reduction in seed germination and vigour index with enhanced pre and postemergence
mortality and produced symptomatic seedling with small necrotic lesions on cotyledonary leaves. Pathogenic
seed mycoflora including A. brassicae were recovered maximum on seed coat followed by endosperm while absent on
cotyledon and embryo.

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Submitted

2024-10-11

Published

2026-04-09

Issue

Section

Short Communication

How to Cite

Incidence and detection of seed mycoflora of Indian mustard (Brassica juncea L) and their deteriorative effect on plant health (Sonali Meena, S Godika, RP Ghasolia, SK Bairwa, Nisha Nitharwal, & Sushila Choudhary, Trans.). (2026). Journal of Oilseed Brassica, 14(2), 175-180. https://doi.org/10.56093/job.v14i2.