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USDA grant to develop reliable biocontrol for Fusarium wilt of tomato

The incorporation of biocontrol agents as part of an Integrated Pest Management (IPM) program should reduce grower reliance on synthetic pesticides and complement other farming practices such as crop rotation. However, inconsistent and unpredictable efficacy in different production systems and environments has limited the wide application of biocontrol.

Relative to foliar diseases, soilborne diseases are much more difficult to control because they can become easily established in the soil and persist from season to season. For decades, pre-plant fumigation, using a combination of methyl bromide and chloropicrin, has been the most effective practice for managing soilborne diseases.
However, since the loss of methyl bromide as a treatment option, in part due to its adverse effect on the Earth’s ozone layer, growers have observed a re-emergence of soilborne diseases such as Fusarium wilt. Therefore, identifying effective alternative strategies or combinations of strategies is important.
Using multi-scale (metabolic/gene activities to organismal interactions) and multi-disciplinary (fungal genetics/genomics, chemical ecology, microbiome analysis, molecular imaging) approaches will enable the team to study how biocontrol works and why biocontrol fails and thus increase the likelihood of success both in terms of disease management and adoption by the growers.
“As articulated by Thomas Edison, ‘I can never find the things that work best until I know the things that don’t work,’ without this understanding, biocontrol would continue to be like blindly shooting a target that is obstructed by a series of moving obstacles,” said Kang. “We may occasionally hit the target, but we would not know what blocked the target in cases of failure and when it might be blocked again. Failure also provides insights that success may not offer and will guide us around the varied pitfalls that have caused previous failures.”
Source : PennState College of Agricultural Sciences, hortidaily.com, plantpath.psu.edu






















