4.7 Article

Assessing the Control of Postharvest Gray Mold Disease on Tomato Fruit Using Mixtures of Essential Oils and Their Respective Hydrolates

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 8, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10081719

Keywords

antifungal activity; tomato; Botrytis cinerea; natural products; aromatic plants

Categories

Funding

  1. Biological Testing Laboratory, Chemistry Department, Universidad Tecnica Federico Santa Maria
  2. Empresa LabSun, Valparaiso, Chile

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The essential oils of thyme and oregano showed strong antifungal activity against gray mold disease, with thyme in particular significantly reducing damage to tomatoes. Combining essential oils and hydrolates enhanced the antifungal activity and could potentially lead to a formulation capable of controlling Botrytis cinerea inoculum on tomato fruits.
Gray mold disease, which is caused by Botrytis cinerea Pers ex. Fr., results in serious economic losses to Lycopersicum esculentum (tomato) crop productivity. In this study, we explored the possibility that mixtures of essential oils (EOs) and their respective hydrolates (HYSs) could be used to control this disease. Thus, EOs and HYSs were obtained from Origanum vulgare, Thymus vulgaris, Citrus limon, and Citrus sinensis by hydrodistillation. In vitro antifungal activities were evaluated, and EC50 values of 15.9 and 19.8 mu g/mL were obtained for EOs of thyme and oregano, respectively. These activities are due mainly to volatile compounds, thymol and carvacrol. Results from in vivo assays show that although most tomatoes were infested five days after inoculation, the damage was considerably reduced by the application of an EO/HYS mixture of thyme. The disease incidence indexes of B. cinerea tomato rot, percentage and severity, measured four days after inoculation, were reduced by 70% and 76%, respectively, as compared with the inoculum control. These results suggest that a combination of HYSs and EOs enhances antifungal activity, and that optimization of relative concentrations, volumes, and the nature of the compounds, could design a formulation able to control B. cinerea inoculum on tomato fruits.

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