In vitro activity of the cinnamon essential oil against the plant pathogen Septoria melissae desm.

Authors

  • Gergő Kovács Department of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants, Szent István University, H-1118 Budapest, Villányi út 29-43., Hungary; Department of Plant Pathology, Szent István University, H-1118 Budapest, Villányi út 29-43., Hungary
  • Éva Zámbori-Németh Department of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants, Szent István University, H-1118 Budapest, Villányi út 29-43., Hungary
  • Péter Radácsi Department of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants, Szent István University, H-1118 Budapest, Villányi út 29-43., Hungary
  • Géza Nagy Directorate of Plant Protection, Soil Conservation and Agri-environment, National Food Chain Safety Office, H-1118 Budapest, Budaörsi út 141-145., Hungary

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18380/SZIE.COLUM.2018.5.2.15

Keywords:

Septoria leafspot, lemon balm, growth inhibition, environmental friendly, medicinal plants

Abstract

Septoria leafspot caused by the mitosporic fungus Septoria melissae Desm. is the most significant disease of lemon balm (Melissa officinalis L.). The fungus frequently appears in the plantations and causes serious yield losses or decreases the quality of the drug. At present plant protection of lemon balm is inadequate due to the lack of authorised plant protection products. The essential oil of the cinnamon bark (CEO) has a strong antimicrobial activity proved by several in vitro experiments. Therefore the goal of our work was to test antifungal effect of the CEO against the pathogen Septoria melissae Desm.

In vitro tests were carried out with three concentrations (0.3%, 0.1%, 0.03%) of the CEO against a Hungarian and a Polish isolate of the fungus. Inhibition of the germination of the conidia as well as the mycelial radial growth was investigated. Supplementary tests were carried out with colonies of the fungi transferred to growth media without CEO after an incubation period of 14 and 35 days on media containing CEO.

Our results showed that all the applied concentrations of CEO have very strong (98.07-100%) inhibitory effect on the mycelial growth of both isolates. Germination of conidia was also blocked on each medium containing CEO. However, the effect of the CEO at 0.03% concentration was reversible. Mycelium began to grow again on media without CEO after transfer.

Based on the results, further investigation of CEO as a potential plant protection product in lemon balm crops is recommended.

Author Biography

  • Gergő Kovács, Department of Medicinal and Aromatic Plants, Szent István University, H-1118 Budapest, Villányi út 29-43., Hungary; Department of Plant Pathology, Szent István University, H-1118 Budapest, Villányi út 29-43., Hungary

    kovacs.gergo.phd@gmail.com
    corresponding author

Downloads

Published

2018-12-15

Issue

Section

Article

How to Cite

In vitro activity of the cinnamon essential oil against the plant pathogen Septoria melissae desm. (2018). COLUMELLA – Journal of Agricultural and Environmental Sciences, 5(2), 15-20. https://doi.org/10.18380/SZIE.COLUM.2018.5.2.15

Similar Articles

11-20 of 92

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.