Bean diseases inoculum in soil and seeds in Nandi county and management of bean root by seed dressing
Abstract
The incidence and severity of bean root rot and seed borne disease has continued to increase
causing yield losses of up to 70%. The increase is partly due to continuous cropping and use of
uncertified farm-saved seeds. This study was carried out to determine the levels of bean disease
inoculum in soils and seed and to evaluate the efficacy of seed dressing in managing root rot. Soil
and bean seed samples were collected from farmer fields of Nandi County in a survey carried out
in 2013. The farm saved seed samples were subjected to physical purity, germination and disease
pathogen isolation. The amount of root rot pathogen inoculum in the soil samples was also
determined by plating on agar medium. Efficacy of seed treatment in managing root rot was
determined by conducting on-farm experiments at Koibem (high fertility area) and Kapkarer (low
fertility area) in Nandi South during 2013 short rain season and also undergreen house conditions.
Seed treatment options evaluated were Seed plus® (10% Imidacloprid, 10% Metalaxyl, 10%
Carbendazim), Murtano super® (20% Lindane, 26% Thiram), Rootgard® (Trichoderma spp.,
Bacillus spp., Pseudomonas spp., Aspergillus spp., Chaetomium spp., Esherichia spp.,
Azorobacter spp.), Funguran – OH 50WP® (50g/l Copper hydroxide), Click 20SL (imidacloprid
200g/l) and Monceren® 125 DS (Imidacloprid 233g/l, Pencycuron 50g/l, Thiram107g/l).
Botanical product Neemraj (azadiractin 0.30%EC) was included in the greenhouse experiments.
The study showed that majority of farmers in Nandi County are small holders growing beans in
plots of less than one acre and use own farm-saved seeds or buy the seeds from local markets and
KALRO. Major root rot pathogens isolated from soils included species of Rhizoctonia, Fusarium
solani, F. oxysporum, Pythium and Macrophomina and the soils contained inoculum levels of up
to 20,000 CFU/g soil in some of the agro-ecological zones. The seed samples had low purity of
less than the recommended 95%, most had germination of less than 85% and had high levels of
infection and contamination with other bean varieties. The bean seed samples contained bacterial
blight pathogen inoculum levels of up to 456 colony forming units per seed for common bacterial
blight (Xanthomonas axonopodis pv.phaseoli) and up to 132 colony forming units per seed for
halo blight (Pseudomonas savastanoi pv. phaseolicola) pathogen. Seed samples showed
symptoms of infection including shrivelling and discolouration, mouldiness and infection on
incubation between paper towels. The agro ecological zones differed in level of seed borne disease
pathogen inoculum with X. axonopodis pv. phaseoli being highly isolated in seeds from agroecological
zone LH1 and P.savastanoi pv. phaseolicola being more isolated in seed samples from
agro-ecological zone UM1-2. Seed dressing options significantly differed in their efficacy in
reducing incidence of bean root rot infection. Seed treatments with Monceren® 125 DS and Click
20sl significantly improved emergence, plant stand, and nodulation, but reduced incidence of root
rot, bean fly (Ophiomyia Spp.) and aphid (Aphis Spp.) infestation.
The results showed that soils and farm saved bean seeds in Nandi are infected with significant
levels of root rot and bacterial blight disease-causing pathogens, respectively. This indicates that
farmers start their bean crops with high inoculum levels which is likely to result in severe disease
infections and low yields. However, dressing the farm saved seeds with appropriate chemical
formulations can drastically reduce the diseases and improve yields. Seed treatment offers a cheap
and environmentally friendly management approach and there is need to sensitize farmers on usage
of seed treatment in bean production.
Citation
Master of science in crop protectionPublisher
University of Nairobi
Subject
Farm-saved seedPhaseolus vulgaris
Root rot
Seed quality
Soil and seed borne inoculum
Seed dressing