Evaluation in vitro of the fungistatic activity of the mandarin essential oil on the growth of Penicillium sp.

The fungi Penicillium digitatum and P. italicumrepresent the main global economic loss to the citrus industry during postharvest stage. Nowadays, the use of fungicides is increasingly restricted due to their carcinogenic, teratogenic, high r...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: María A. Velásquez, Rafael M. Álvarez, Pablo J. Tamayo, Catarina P. Carvalho
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Corporación Colombiana de Investigación Agropecuaria (Corpoica) 2014-01-01
Series:Ciencia y Tecnología Agropecuaria
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revista.corpoica.org.co/index.php/revista/article/view/392/309
id doaj-1abba4d04ecb4c079108cc741baac035
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1abba4d04ecb4c079108cc741baac0352020-11-25T01:24:08ZspaCorporación Colombiana de Investigación Agropecuaria (Corpoica)Ciencia y Tecnología Agropecuaria0122-87062014-01-0115171410.21930/rcta.vol15_num1_art:392Evaluation in vitro of the fungistatic activity of the mandarin essential oil on the growth of Penicillium sp.María A. Velásquez0Rafael M. Álvarez1Pablo J. Tamayo2Catarina P. Carvalho3CorpoicaCorpoicaUniversidad de AntioquíaCorpoicaThe fungi Penicillium digitatum and P. italicumrepresent the main global economic loss to the citrus industry during postharvest stage. Nowadays, the use of fungicides is increasingly restricted due to their carcinogenic, teratogenic, high residuality, long degradation period, environmental contamination, increased pathogen resistance, among others. Natural antimicrobial compounds could be a safe and viable option to minimize disease losses facing the industry. In this study, we evaluated in vitro the activity of tymol, carvacrol and commercial mandarin oil (Italian Mandarin) at concentrations of 40 and 50 ppm using the agar diffusion method and microbiological testing. All the essential oils evaluated for both fungi, showed an inhibition rate between 50% and 100%, and the effect was higher at doses of 50 ppm. This effect was followed by inhibition of sporulation and germination. Carvacrol showed the higher antifungal activity for both fungi studied. P. digitatum showed a greater sensitivity to the effect of the essential oils evaluated compared to P. italicum. Commercial mandarin essential oil can be an alternative to the control of postharvest diseases caused by Penicillium sp. in plant products.http://revista.corpoica.org.co/index.php/revista/article/view/392/309citrusessential oilsbioactivitytymolcarvacrol.
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author María A. Velásquez
Rafael M. Álvarez
Pablo J. Tamayo
Catarina P. Carvalho
spellingShingle María A. Velásquez
Rafael M. Álvarez
Pablo J. Tamayo
Catarina P. Carvalho
Evaluation in vitro of the fungistatic activity of the mandarin essential oil on the growth of Penicillium sp.
Ciencia y Tecnología Agropecuaria
citrus
essential oils
bioactivity
tymol
carvacrol.
author_facet María A. Velásquez
Rafael M. Álvarez
Pablo J. Tamayo
Catarina P. Carvalho
author_sort María A. Velásquez
title Evaluation in vitro of the fungistatic activity of the mandarin essential oil on the growth of Penicillium sp.
title_short Evaluation in vitro of the fungistatic activity of the mandarin essential oil on the growth of Penicillium sp.
title_full Evaluation in vitro of the fungistatic activity of the mandarin essential oil on the growth of Penicillium sp.
title_fullStr Evaluation in vitro of the fungistatic activity of the mandarin essential oil on the growth of Penicillium sp.
title_full_unstemmed Evaluation in vitro of the fungistatic activity of the mandarin essential oil on the growth of Penicillium sp.
title_sort evaluation in vitro of the fungistatic activity of the mandarin essential oil on the growth of penicillium sp.
publisher Corporación Colombiana de Investigación Agropecuaria (Corpoica)
series Ciencia y Tecnología Agropecuaria
issn 0122-8706
publishDate 2014-01-01
description The fungi Penicillium digitatum and P. italicumrepresent the main global economic loss to the citrus industry during postharvest stage. Nowadays, the use of fungicides is increasingly restricted due to their carcinogenic, teratogenic, high residuality, long degradation period, environmental contamination, increased pathogen resistance, among others. Natural antimicrobial compounds could be a safe and viable option to minimize disease losses facing the industry. In this study, we evaluated in vitro the activity of tymol, carvacrol and commercial mandarin oil (Italian Mandarin) at concentrations of 40 and 50 ppm using the agar diffusion method and microbiological testing. All the essential oils evaluated for both fungi, showed an inhibition rate between 50% and 100%, and the effect was higher at doses of 50 ppm. This effect was followed by inhibition of sporulation and germination. Carvacrol showed the higher antifungal activity for both fungi studied. P. digitatum showed a greater sensitivity to the effect of the essential oils evaluated compared to P. italicum. Commercial mandarin essential oil can be an alternative to the control of postharvest diseases caused by Penicillium sp. in plant products.
topic citrus
essential oils
bioactivity
tymol
carvacrol.
url http://revista.corpoica.org.co/index.php/revista/article/view/392/309
work_keys_str_mv AT mariaavelasquez evaluationinvitroofthefungistaticactivityofthemandarinessentialoilonthegrowthofpenicilliumsp
AT rafaelmalvarez evaluationinvitroofthefungistaticactivityofthemandarinessentialoilonthegrowthofpenicilliumsp
AT pablojtamayo evaluationinvitroofthefungistaticactivityofthemandarinessentialoilonthegrowthofpenicilliumsp
AT catarinapcarvalho evaluationinvitroofthefungistaticactivityofthemandarinessentialoilonthegrowthofpenicilliumsp
_version_ 1725118558630838272