Effect of Biofumigation on Population Densities of Pratylenchus spp. and Verticillium spp. and Potato Yield in Eastern Canada
Biofumigation has been proposed as an alternative to soil fumigation to manage soil-borne diseases including potato early dying disease complex (PED). This study examined the potential of using brown mustard ( Mustard juncea ) biofumigation to manage PED under rain-fed potato production in New Bruns...
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Veröffentlicht in: | American journal of potato research 2022, Vol.99 (3), p.229-242 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | Biofumigation has been proposed as an alternative to soil fumigation to manage soil-borne diseases including potato early dying disease complex (PED). This study examined the potential of using brown mustard (
Mustard juncea
) biofumigation to manage PED under rain-fed potato production in New Brunswick, Canada in two trials between 2017 and 2020 in comparison with chloropicrin fumigation and a conventional barley rotation. Biofumigation increased yield in one trial, but not in a second trial where the potato crop experienced severe drought, whereas chloropicrin fumigation increased yield in both trials. Biofumigation was effective in suppressing root-lesion nematode (RLN,
Pratylenchus
spp.) counts in both trials, but was ineffective in suppressing
V. dahliae
population density. Chloropicrin fumigation was effective in suppressing RLN counts and
V. dahliae
population density only in the hill where injected, but the effect was short-lived as the population density of
V. dahliae
in the hill increased to the level of the control in one potato growing season. Biofumigation may be an alternative to chloropicrin fumigation in managing PED, particularly in fields with high RLN population but relatively low
Verticillium
population density. However, neither biofumigation nor fumigation used alone may be sustainable in the short-term potato rotations commonly used in New Brunswick, and additional beneficial practices are required to sustain productivity in the long-term. |
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ISSN: | 1099-209X 1874-9380 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s12230-022-09875-2 |