Organic Soil Amendments as Potential Alternatives to Methyl Bromide for Control of Soilborne Pathogens in Forest Tree Nurseries


In a multi-year project, pine seedlings are being grown in nurseries in Florida and South Carolina to evaluate the effects of organic amendments on the development of disease and potential management of plant pathogens over time without the use of soil fumigants. Seedling survival, plant quality and outplant performance are being evaluated. The study in South Carolina is currently in its first year and the study in Florida is midway through its second year. Although pathogenic fungi, including species of Fusarium, Macrophomina, Pythium, and Rhizoctonia, and plant parasitic nematodes (Mesocriconema, Paratrichodorus, and Tylenchorenchus spp.) have been detected, no serious disease development has been observed. At the end of the first growing season in the Florida nursery, seedlings from fumigated plots were taller than plants from control plots. The sizes of seedlings from amended plots, however, did not differ from sizes of plants from either fumigated or control plots.
PDF details
Download this file
Publication Forest Nursery Proceedings
Event Williamsburg, VA - 1994
Author M. E. Kannwischer-Mitchell, E. L. Barnard, D. J. Mitchell, and S.W. Fraedrich
Published 1950/01/01
** PDF Files require the Adobe Acrobat Reader.

Search Tree Planters Notes
If you can read this text, it means you are not experiencing the RNGR design at its best. RNGR makes heavy use of CSS, which means it is accessible to any internet browser, but the design needs a standards-compliant browser represent the intended look. Just so you know ;)