Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4504771 Biological Control 2008 6 Pages PDF
Abstract

The potential of using Rhodotorula glutinis alone or in combination with salicylic acid (SA) for the control of postharvest gray mold decay of peach fruit, and their effects on postharvest quality of fruit was investigated. Washed cell suspensions of yeast controlled gray mold better than yeast in culture broth. Treatment of wounds with autoclaved cell cultures or cell-free culture filtrate did not prevent decay. Rapid colonization of the yeast in wounds was observed during the first day at 20 °C, then the populations stabilized for the remaining storage period. Spore germination and germ tube elongation of Botrytis cinerea in PDB was controlled by the living cell of R. glutinis: the percentage of spore germination of B. cinerea incubated with R. glutinis was reduced by 69.3% compared with control; similarly, the length of germ tube of B. cinerea incubated with R. glutinis was reduced by 65.8% compared with control. SA (100 μg/mL) could enhance the biocontrol activity of R. glutinis against gray mold decay in peach fruit. The application of SA and R. glutinis as stand-alone treatments did not produce significant control efficacy to natural infection of peach fruits. However, R. glutinis in combination with SA resulted in low average natural infection incidence in fruit, 16.67%, compared with 46.67% in the water-treated control fruit. SA, the yeast antagonist and the combination of them both had no significant effect on quality parameters after 7 days at 20 °C.

Related Topics
Life Sciences Agricultural and Biological Sciences Agronomy and Crop Science
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