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Journal ArticleDOI

Bio-potential of compost tea from agro-waste to suppress Choanephora cucurbitarum L. the causal pathogen of wet rot of okra.

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TLDR
Glass house trials indicated that induced host resistance was stimulated in okra plants treated with non-sterilized and filter-sterILized compost teas based on the detection of inducible resistance-related compounds, confirming the possible involvement of induced resistance.
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This article is published in Biological Control.The article was published on 2009-04-01. It has received 108 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Choanephora cucurbitarum & Choanephora.

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Book ChapterDOI

Role of Microbiotic Factors Against the Soil-Borne Phytopathogens

TL;DR: This chapter discussed the importance of nematodes belonging to order Aphelenchida and Tylenchida which proved to be good management model organisms to inhibit or kill phytopathogens just like plant growth, promoting bacteria and fungi.
Dissertation

Effect of composted Phalaborwa ground phosphate rock on performance of grain sorghum grown on variable soil conditions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors proposed a 3.19-approximation of the score: 2.19 3.1/3.0/4.1.0.
Journal ArticleDOI

In vitro and Field Evaluation of Compost tea and Seaweed Formulation on Leaf Blight of Sunflower

TL;DR: Among the major diseases, sunflower ranks fourth in area after soybean, rapeseed and groundnut, and North America is the native of sunflower and since ancient times it was grown as an ornamental plant.
Book ChapterDOI

Disease-Suppressive Effect of Compost Tea Against Phytopathogens in Sustaining Herbal Plant Productivity

TL;DR: This review provides the key principles to several aspects of inhibitory potential of compost teas derived from biological origins including fundamental idea for the preparation of compost tea, bio-efficacy effects in managing the plant diseases, as well as mechanism on disease suppression.
Journal ArticleDOI

PERFORMANCE OF FREE LIVING N2-FIXERS BACTERIA, COMPOST TEA AND MINERAL NITROGEN APPLICATIONS ON SOME SOIL PROPERTIES, PRODUCTIVITY AND QUALITY OF ONION CROP (Giza red vr.).

TL;DR: In this paper, a field experiment was conducted to study the response of onion to nitrogen fertilizer levels under different bio-organic fertilizers (compost tea and N2-fixing bacteria) as well as their interaction on some soil properties and the growth and onion bulbs yield and its quality during the two successive winter seasons of 2009/2010 and 2010/2011.
References
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Book

Introduction to Plant Disease Epidemiology

TL;DR: This paper presents the results of a two-year study into the design and modelling of Spatial Pattern Simulation Models of Plant Disease Designing Experiments and Sampling Crop Loss Assessment and Modelling Forecasting Plant Diseases.
BookDOI

Modern soil microbiology

TL;DR: Soil Environment, D.D. Standing and K. Killham Microbial Phylogeny and Diversity in Soil, V.T. Torsvik and L. Ovreas Horizontal Gene Transfer and Microevolution in So soil, K.K. Finlay and M.I. Prosser Soil Microbial Communities and Global Climate Change-Methanotrophic and Methanogenic Communities as Paradigms.
BookDOI

Pathogenesis-related proteins in plants

TL;DR: The present work focused on the response of Plant Cell Wall Hydroxyproline-Rich Glycoproteins to Microbial Pathogens and their Elicitors and the role of thionins in the Resistance of Plants.
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