Colonization, distribution and persistence of fungal endophytes in tissue culture banana

Abstract: 
The use of mutualistic fungal endophytes to control the banana weevil (Cosmopolites sordidus) and banana parasitic nematodes (Radopholus similis, Pratylenchus goodei and Helicotylenchus multicinctus) is currently being investigated at the International Institute of Tropical Agriculture. Fungal endophytes are micro-organisms that colonize the plant through the root system and for a part or whole of their life cycle symptomlessly within the plant. Such organisms in some instances have been known to act as antagonists against pests and diseases. For an endophyte strain to be a good antagonist against target pests, it must be present in the plant tissues at teh time the plants are attacked by the pests. They, therefore, need to be artificially inoculated in tissue culture banana plants, must occur at high frequencies in the plant and be able to persist in the plant after inoculation. It is also critical that an endophyte successfully colonizes and persists from teh time of inocualtion onwards. Screen house studies where two fusarium strains, V2w2 and III4w1, were artificially inoculated into two banana cultivars, Nabusa and Kibuzi (Musa, AAA-EA), using diffirent inoculation methods revealed that tissue colonization depended on the method of endophyte inoculation and differed for the different tissues investigated. Studies using the same two strains and same banana cultivars showed that colonization persistence also depended on inoculation methods and was different among the types of tissue within the banana plant. Plant tissue colonization varied by cultivar and strain combinations, indicating the need for identifying suitable cultivar-strain combinations.
Language: 
English
Date of publication: 
2005
Country: 
Region Focus: 
East Africa
Author/Editor(s): 
University/affiliation: 
Collection: 
RUFORUM Theses and Dissertations
Licence conditions: 
Open Access
Access restriction: 
Supervisor: 
Prof. Adipala Ekwamu (Executive Secretary of RUFORUM) , Dr. George Bigirwa (AGRA)
Form: 
Printed resource
Extent: 
xv,116