<em>In vivo</em> efficacy of natural essential oil of <em>Syzygium aromaticum</em> L. bud for protecting the <em>Pisum sativum</em> L. seeds
Online Publishing @ NISCAIR
View Archive InfoField | Value | |
Authentication Code |
dc |
|
Title Statement |
<em>In vivo</em> efficacy of natural essential oil of <em>Syzygium aromaticum</em> L. bud for protecting the <em>Pisum sativum</em> L. seeds |
|
Added Entry - Uncontrolled Name |
Kumar, Narendra ; Amity Institute of Biotechnology, Amity University Haryana, Gurgaon Manesar 122413, Haryana, India Khurana, S M Paul; Amity Institute of Biotechnology, Amity University Haryana, Gurgaon Manesar 122413, Haryana, India Pandey, Vashist N.; Experimental Botany and Nutraceutical Lab, Department of Botany, DDU Gorakhpur University, Gorakhpur 273009, Uttar Pradesh, India nil |
|
Uncontrolled Index Term |
UTILIZATION OF PLANTS Clove bud; Fungitoxicant oil; MIC; Pisum sativum L.; Spectrum; Syzygium aromaticum L. |
|
Summary, etc. |
<p style="text-align: justify;">The mycological investigations on sixty samples of stored garden pea food seeds revealed presence of twelve and ten species of fungi by blotter and agar plate techniques respectively. The fungal species were associated with genera viz., <em>Alternaria</em>,<em> Aspergillus</em>,<em> Botrytis</em>, <em>Chaetomium</em>, <em>Cladosporium</em>, <em>Curvularia</em>, <em>Fusarium</em>,<em> Penicillium </em>and <em>Rhizopus</em>. The fungal species viz., <em>Cladosporium herbarum (Pers.) Link and Penicillium italicum Wehmer did not show its appearance in agar plate method. It showed dominance of </em><em>Aspergillus flavus</em>, <em>Aspergillus niger</em>, <em>Aspergillus ochraceous</em>, <em>Aspergillus terreus </em>in blotter method in comparison to agar plating.<em> Aspergillus tmarii</em>,<em> P. italicum and Rhizopus stolonifer</em> did not grow on sterilized seeds in Blotter method. Pathogenicity tests of dominant fungi caused biodeterioration in garden pea seeds. The antifungal testing of essential oils revealed <em>Syzygium aromaticum</em> L. bud oil to be fungitoxic at 500 ppm (0.025 mL). The minimum inhibitory concentration of the <em>S. aromaticum</em> oil was found to be 300 ppm against four fungi viz., <em>A. flavus</em>, <em>A. niger</em>,<em> A. ochraceous </em>and <em>A. terreus</em>. At this concentration the oil<em> </em>was found to be fungicidal and thermostable. The oil activity was not affected by physical factors and showed broad spectrum. <em>In</em> <em>vivo</em> study depicted that clove oil was more effective in comparison to EDCT. It controlled a maximum of 4 fungi while the clove oil showed no growth of fungi even after 6 months storage.</p> |
|
Publication, Distribution, Etc. |
Indian Journal of Natural Products and Resources (IJNPR) [Formerly Natural Product Radiance (NPR)] 2022-09-06 11:30:19 |
|
Electronic Location and Access |
application/pdf http://op.niscair.res.in/index.php/IJNPR/article/view/56159 |
|
Data Source Entry |
Indian Journal of Natural Products and Resources (IJNPR) [Formerly Natural Product Radiance (NPR)]; ##issue.vol## 13, ##issue.no## 3 (2022): September 2022 (Ahead of Print) |
|
Language Note |
en |
|
Nonspecific Relationship Entry |
http://op.niscair.res.in/index.php/IJNPR/article/download/56159/465582658 |
|
Terms Governing Use and Reproduction Note |
Authors who publish with IJNPR agree that once published copyright of the article will be transferred to the publisher, with the work simultaneously licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-BY-NC-ND 4.0 International License.. that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work's authorship and initial publication in this journal. Except where otherwise noted, the Articles on this site are licensed underCreative Commons License: CC Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 2.5 India |
|