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Applied and Environmental Microbiology, March 1999, p. 1020-1028, Vol. 65, No. 3
Department of Plant Pathology, University of
Hawaii at Manoa, Honolulu, Hawaii 96822-2279
Received 7 August 1998/Accepted 22 November 1998
Growth and survival of Xanthomonas campestris pv.
dieffenbachiae in guttation fluids (xylem sap exuded from leaf margins) of anthuriums were suppressed by several bacterial strains indigenous to leaves of various anthurium cultivars. Inhibition of growth was not
observed in filter-sterilized guttation fluids and was restored to
original levels only by reintroducing specific mixtures of bacteria
into filter-sterilized guttation fluids. The inhibitory effect was
related to the species in the bacterial community rather than to the
total numbers of bacteria in the guttation fluids. One very effective
bacterial community consisted of five species isolated from inhibitory
guttation fluids of two susceptible anthurium cultivars. The individual
strains in this community had no effect on the pathogen, but the
mixture was inhibitory to X. campestris pv. dieffenbachiae
in guttation fluids. The populations of the individual strains remained
near the initial inoculum levels for at least 14 days. The effect of
the five inhibitory strains on reducing disease in susceptible
anthurium plants was tested by using a bioluminescent strain of
X. campestris pv. dieffenbachiae to monitor the progression
of disease in leaves nondestructively. Invasion of the pathogen through
hydathodes at leaf margins was reduced by applying the strain mixture
to the leaves. When the strain mixture was applied directly to wounds
created on the leaf margins, the pathogen failed to invade through the
wounds. This bacterial community has potential for biological control
of anthurium blight.
0099-2240/99/$04.00+0
Copyright © 1999, American Society for Microbiology. All rights reserved.
Suppression of Bacterial Blight by a Bacterial
Community Isolated from the Guttation Fluids of Anthuriums
*
Corresponding author. Present address: Department of
Nematology, University of California, 1303 Webber Hall, Riverside, CA 92521-0415. Phone: (909) 787-5328. Fax: (909) 787-3719. E-mail: ryof{at}ucrac1.ucr.edu.
Journal Series No. 4393 of the Hawaii Institute of Tropical
Agriculture and Human Resources.
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