Fungicidal impact on chickpea--Mesorhizobium symbiosis.

Mohd Aamil, Almas Zaidi, Md Saghir Khan
Author Information
  1. Mohd Aamil: Department of Agricultural Microbiology, RAK Institute of Agricultural Sciences, Aligarh Muslim University, Aligarh, UP, India.

Abstract

The effects of carbendazim, captan, thiram, and mancozeb, on plant vitality, chlorophyll content, N uptake, protein content, nodulation, and seed yield in chickpea (Cicer arietinun) were assessed in a controlled environment. Seeds treated with fungicides at 1 and 1.5 g.a.i. kg seed had no significant adverse effect on plant vigor, seed yield, and N and protein contents. In contrast, fungicides applied at 2 g.a.i./kg of captan, thiram and mancozeb, significantly reduced the measured parameters. In general, the toxicity of fungicides in terms of seed yield increased in the following order: Control=carbendazim > thiram > captan > mancozeb. Total chlorophyll content in foliage declined consistently with fungicides dose rates and application days. Seeds treated with lower rates of fungicides significantly increased nodulation (nodule number per plant and its dry mass) and were compatible with chickpea inoculum used in this study. Although carbendazim at 2 g.a.i. kg seed had no phytotoxic effect assessed under greenhouse conditions, it significantly reduced the chlorophyll content, nodulation (60d) and N content in shoots.

MeSH Term

Chlorophyll
Cicer
Fungicides, Industrial
Nitrogen
Plant Leaves
Plant Roots
Rhizobiaceae
Seeds
Soil Pollutants
Symbiosis

Chemicals

Fungicides, Industrial
Soil Pollutants
Chlorophyll
Nitrogen

Word Cloud

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