Examine medicinal plants from South Africa for suppression of Meloidogyne incognita under glasshouse conditions

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Date
2020Author
Khosa, Mbokota Candy
De Waele, Dirk
Dube, Zakheleni
Daneel, Mieke Stefanie
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The nematicidal activity of crudely milled powders of stems, leaves,
and bulbs of Cassia abbreviata, Cissus cactiformis, Euphorbia ingens,
Ipomoea kituiensis, Synadenium cupulare, Senna petersiana, Urigenia
sanguinea, Maerua angolensis, and Tabernaemontana elegans on
eggs and J2 population densities of Meloidogyne incognita race 2
on tomato was examined under glasshouse conditions. These plant
species have medicinal properties and are being used in South Africa
by traditional healers as so-called “muti.” All plant species showed a
suppressive effect. Relative to untreated control, the soil amendments
consistently suppressed M. incognita population densities in tomato
roots and the reproductive potential (RP) of the nematode. When
compared to fenamiphos, a commercial systemic chemical nematicide,
the soil amendments performed comparable or better in suppressing
nematode populations in the root systems in 2008 and 2009, but
fenamiphos performed better than all soil amendments in 2011. The
RP of M. incognita was comparable for both soil amendment- and
fenamiphos-treated plants. No consistent trend in the effect of the soil
amendments on plant root and shoot bioweight was observed, except
when plants were treated with T. elegans-based soil amendments and
both root and shoot bioweight were consistently higher compared
with untreated control plants. Our results show that the plant species
examined are potential sources of phytonematicides effective against
M. incognita race 2
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http://hdl.handle.net/10394/34585https://www.exeley.com/exeley/journals/journal_of_nematology/52/i_current/pdf/10.21307_jofnem-2020-029.pdf
https://doi.org/10.21307/jofnem-2020-029