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http://dx.doi.org/10.5423/PPJ.2008.24.2.178

Nematocidal Screening of Essential Oils and Herbal Extracts against Bursaphelenchus xylophilus  

Elbadri, Gamal A.A. (Agricultural Research Corporation, Crop Protection Research Center)
Lee, Dong-Woon (Department of Applied Biology, Kyungpook National University)
Park, Jung-Chan (Department of Applied Biology and Environmental Sciences, Gyeongsang National University)
Yu, Hwang-Bin (Department of Applied Biology and Environmental Sciences, Gyeongsang National University)
Choo, Ho-Yul (Department of Applied Biology and Environmental Sciences, Gyeongsang National University)
Lee, Sang-Myeong (Southern Forest Research Center, Korea Forest Research Institute)
Lim, Tae-Heon (Research Institute of Agri-Bio Science)
Publication Information
The Plant Pathology Journal / v.24, no.2, 2008 , pp. 178-182 More about this Journal
Abstract
Five essential oils and 15 herbal extracts were evaluated to control Bursaphelenchus xylophillus in laboratory. The essential oils from clove plant (Syzygium aromaticum), mustard (Brassica integrefolia), thyme (Thymus vulgaris), and Pelargonium inquinans were found to be highly promising and gave excellent control of the nematodes at all the time of exposure. Among them, the least one gave 91.3% mean mortality rate at 24 hours of exposure time, which is highly significant from the control. While in the second study, most of the methanol (Desmodium caudatum, Paulownia coreana, Auckulandia lappa, Sophota flavescens, Aloe sp., Rheum palmatum, Zingiber officinale, Magnolia officinalis, and Eugenia caryophyllata), hexane (Torreya nucifera, Pharbitis nil, Prunus mume, Melia azedarach, and Xanthium strumarium), and hot water (Cinnamomum cassia) herbal extracts killed the nematodes, but in varying degrees compared to the control. Only one extract was found to be promising viz Magnolia officinalis which found to be statistically different from the control and gave mean mortality of 72, 82.3, and 85.3 % for 24, 48, and 72 hours exposure, respectively. Further screening was conducted for M. officinalis with concentrations of 1,000, 100, and 10 ppm against the same species of nematode with the same time of exposure. However, it gave an excellent result for 1,000 ppm for all time of exposure, whereas for the 100 and 10 ppm it gave mean mortality of 39.5 and 25.8% for the time 72hrs, respectively that were statistically different from the control.
Keywords
biocontrol; Bursaphelenchus xylophilus; essential oil; herbal plant; pine wilt disease;
Citations & Related Records
Times Cited By KSCI : 1  (Citation Analysis)
Times Cited By Web Of Science : 6  (Related Records In Web of Science)
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