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Fungicide sensitivity of Trichoderma spp. from Agaricus bisporus farms in Serbia
Authors:Dejana Kosanović  Jelena Vukojević  Mirjana Stajić  Emil Rekanović  Miloš Stepanović
Institution:1. Institute of Virology, Vaccines and Sera “Torlak,” Belgrade, Serbia;2. Institute of Botany, Faculty of Biology, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia;3. Institute of Pesticides and Environmental Protection, Belgrade-Zemun, Serbia
Abstract:Trichoderma species, the causal agents of green mould disease, induce great losses in Agaricus bisporus farms. Fungicides are widely used to control mushroom diseases although green mould control is encumbered with difficulties. The aims of this study were, therefore, to research in vitro toxicity of several commercial fungicides to Trichoderma isolates originating from Serbian and Bosnia-Herzegovina farms, and to evaluate the effects of pH and light on their growth. The majority of isolates demonstrated optimal growth at pH 5.0, and the rest at pH 6.0. A few isolates also grew well at pH 7. The weakest mycelial growth was noted at pH 8.0–9.0. Generally, light had an inhibitory effect on the growth of tested isolates. The isolates showed the highest susceptibility to chlorothalonil and carbendazim (ED50 less than 1 mg L?1), and were less sensitive to iprodione (ED50 ranged 0.84–6.72 mg L?1), weakly resistant to thiophanate-methyl (ED50 = 3.75–24.13 mg L?1), and resistant to trifloxystrobin (ED50 = 10.25–178.23 mg L?1). Considering the toxicity of fungicides to A. bisporus, carbendazim showed the best selective toxicity (0.02), iprodione and chlorothalonil moderate (0.16), and thiophanate-methyl the lowest (1.24), while trifloxystrobin toxicity to A. bisporus was not tested because of its inefficiency against Trichoderma isolates.
Keywords:Green mould disease  antifungal activity  cultivated mushroom
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