Evaluation of selected fungicide treatment for the control of seedborne fungal pathogens in forage germplasm

Seedborne fungal pathogens pose a significant threat to seed quality, germination, and crop establishment, and can spread through international germplasm exchange, creating serious biosecurity risks. This study evaluated the efficacy of selected fungicides as seed treatment for controlling seedborne...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Dawit, Woubit, Mulatu, Fikerte, Hirko, Mignote, Negawo, Alemayehu T.
Formato: Informe técnico
Lenguaje:Inglés
Publicado: International Livestock Research Institute 2025
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179315
_version_ 1855542875447623680
author Dawit, Woubit
Mulatu, Fikerte
Hirko, Mignote
Negawo, Alemayehu T.
author_browse Dawit, Woubit
Hirko, Mignote
Mulatu, Fikerte
Negawo, Alemayehu T.
author_facet Dawit, Woubit
Mulatu, Fikerte
Hirko, Mignote
Negawo, Alemayehu T.
author_sort Dawit, Woubit
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Seedborne fungal pathogens pose a significant threat to seed quality, germination, and crop establishment, and can spread through international germplasm exchange, creating serious biosecurity risks. This study evaluated the efficacy of selected fungicides as seed treatment for controlling seedborne fungi in forage germplasm. The seeds of five forage accessions with a history of fungal infections were treated with SAAF (Carbendazim 12% + Mancozeb 63% WP), Apron Star (Thiamethoxam 20% + Metalaxyl-M 20% + Difenoconazole 2% WS), Carbendazim (Carbendazim 50% WP), and untreated control. The fungicide-treated seeds were incubated on moist blotter paper and Potato Dextrose Agar (PDA) at 23 ± 1 °C for seven days and then examined for fungal infection. Treatment efficacy was assessed based on the incidence of infected seeds, diversity of fungal genera, and percentage reduction relative to untreated controls. Results showed that SAAF exhibited the highest efficacy, achieving a 96.60% reduction in seed infection, followed by Carbendazim (50%) and Apron Star (48%). The untreated seeds (control) recorded a 44.29% infection incidence, with multiple pathogens detected including Alternaria, Fusarium, Aspergillus, and Phoma. Overall, the results demonstrate the superior performance of SAAF, formulated with carbendazim and mancozeb, providing the most effective suppression of a broad range of seedborne fungi. Fungicide seed treatment, especially with SAAF, therefore, offers an effective strategy for improving seed health and reducing the risk of pathogen dissemination with seeds
format Informe técnico
id CGSpace179315
institution CGIAR Consortium
language Inglés
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher International Livestock Research Institute
publisherStr International Livestock Research Institute
record_format dspace
spelling CGSpace1793152026-01-06T02:17:49Z Evaluation of selected fungicide treatment for the control of seedborne fungal pathogens in forage germplasm Dawit, Woubit Mulatu, Fikerte Hirko, Mignote Negawo, Alemayehu T. fungicides forage plant diseases seed seed quality Seedborne fungal pathogens pose a significant threat to seed quality, germination, and crop establishment, and can spread through international germplasm exchange, creating serious biosecurity risks. This study evaluated the efficacy of selected fungicides as seed treatment for controlling seedborne fungi in forage germplasm. The seeds of five forage accessions with a history of fungal infections were treated with SAAF (Carbendazim 12% + Mancozeb 63% WP), Apron Star (Thiamethoxam 20% + Metalaxyl-M 20% + Difenoconazole 2% WS), Carbendazim (Carbendazim 50% WP), and untreated control. The fungicide-treated seeds were incubated on moist blotter paper and Potato Dextrose Agar (PDA) at 23 ± 1 °C for seven days and then examined for fungal infection. Treatment efficacy was assessed based on the incidence of infected seeds, diversity of fungal genera, and percentage reduction relative to untreated controls. Results showed that SAAF exhibited the highest efficacy, achieving a 96.60% reduction in seed infection, followed by Carbendazim (50%) and Apron Star (48%). The untreated seeds (control) recorded a 44.29% infection incidence, with multiple pathogens detected including Alternaria, Fusarium, Aspergillus, and Phoma. Overall, the results demonstrate the superior performance of SAAF, formulated with carbendazim and mancozeb, providing the most effective suppression of a broad range of seedborne fungi. Fungicide seed treatment, especially with SAAF, therefore, offers an effective strategy for improving seed health and reducing the risk of pathogen dissemination with seeds 2025-12-15 2025-12-29T11:04:42Z 2025-12-29T11:04:42Z Report https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179315 en Open Access application/pdf International Livestock Research Institute Dawit, W., Mulatu, F., Hirko, M. and Negawo, A.T. 2025. Evaluation of selected fungicide treatment for the control of seedborne fungal pathogens in forage germplasm. Nairobi, Kenya: ILRI.
spellingShingle fungicides
forage
plant diseases
seed
seed quality
Dawit, Woubit
Mulatu, Fikerte
Hirko, Mignote
Negawo, Alemayehu T.
Evaluation of selected fungicide treatment for the control of seedborne fungal pathogens in forage germplasm
title Evaluation of selected fungicide treatment for the control of seedborne fungal pathogens in forage germplasm
title_full Evaluation of selected fungicide treatment for the control of seedborne fungal pathogens in forage germplasm
title_fullStr Evaluation of selected fungicide treatment for the control of seedborne fungal pathogens in forage germplasm
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation of selected fungicide treatment for the control of seedborne fungal pathogens in forage germplasm
title_short Evaluation of selected fungicide treatment for the control of seedborne fungal pathogens in forage germplasm
title_sort evaluation of selected fungicide treatment for the control of seedborne fungal pathogens in forage germplasm
topic fungicides
forage
plant diseases
seed
seed quality
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/179315
work_keys_str_mv AT dawitwoubit evaluationofselectedfungicidetreatmentforthecontrolofseedbornefungalpathogensinforagegermplasm
AT mulatufikerte evaluationofselectedfungicidetreatmentforthecontrolofseedbornefungalpathogensinforagegermplasm
AT hirkomignote evaluationofselectedfungicidetreatmentforthecontrolofseedbornefungalpathogensinforagegermplasm
AT negawoalemayehut evaluationofselectedfungicidetreatmentforthecontrolofseedbornefungalpathogensinforagegermplasm