4.7 Article

Antifungal Potential of Canarian Plant Extracts against High-Risk Phytopathogens

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 11, Issue 21, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants11212988

Keywords

plant extracts; natural fungicides; phytopathogenic fungi; pest control

Categories

Funding

  1. Project MACBIOPEST [MAC2/1.1a/289]
  2. Program Interreg MAC 2014-2020 - European Regional Development Fund (FEDER)
  3. Spanish MINECO project [RTI2018-094356-B-C21]
  4. European Regional Development Fund (FEDER)

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Phytopathogens cause significant losses in agriculture. This study evaluated sixteen plant species from the Canary Islands against three phytopathogenic fungi and identified five potential candidates for biofungicide development.
Phytopathogens are responsible for great losses in agriculture. In particular, Fusarium, Alternaria and Botrytis are fungal diseases that affect crops worldwide. In the search for eco-friendly solutions to pest control, plants and their chemo-biodiversity are promising sources of biopesticides for integrated pest management. The aim of the present study is to report the evaluation of sixteen plant species from the Canary Islands Archipelago against the phytopathogenic fungi Botrytis cinerea, Fusarium oxysporum, and Alternaria alternata. The plants were selected on the basis of their traditional uses in medicine and/or pest control, as well as on scientific studies reporting their uses in crop protection. Their growth inhibition (% I), in an in vitro test-assay on mycelium, was used to identify six ethanolic plant extracts displaying activity (% I > 30% at 1 mg/mL) against at least one of the assayed fungi. The most effective plant extracts were further fractionated by liquid-liquid partition, using solvents of increasing polarity. This procedure led to an improvement of the bioactivity against the phytopathogens, even affecting the hexane fraction from S. canariensis and achieving an 83.93% of growth inhibition at 0.5 mg/mL on B. cinerea. These findings identified five plant-derived extracts as potential candidates for the future development of new biofungicides, which could be applied in integrated pest management.

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