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Effect of horticultural waste composting on infected plant residues with pathogenic bacteria and fungi: integrated and localized sanitation.

Abstract
The aim of this work was to study the effect of composting on the viability of plant pathogenic fungi and bacteria. The research consisted of pilot-scale composting of horticultural waste in compost windrows. Studies were carried out on vegetable residues infected with plant pathogenic microorganisms included by either integrated or localized infection. In the first case, the plant pathogen viability was investigated when infected material was mixed throughout compost, while the localized infection was used to study the effect of the composting process on plant waste spot-inoculated with pathogenic microorganisms. Results for localized sanitation showed the total elimination of all tested phytopathogens between 48 and 120 h after composting began. In this case significant differences were observed in relation to 9 different zones in the pile. The disappearance of these microorganisms was similar when all plant waste included in the windrow was infected (integrated infection). Additionally, the results obtained confirmed that the bacteria showed a greater capacity to persist during composting than the fungi. Composting is therefore considered a useful method for recycling horticultural waste and eliminating phytopathogenic bacteria and fungi that inhabit this kind of residue.
AuthorsF Suárez-Estrella, M C Vargas-García, M J López, J Moreno
JournalWaste management (New York, N.Y.) (Waste Manag) Vol. 27 Issue 7 Pg. 886-92 ( 2007) ISSN: 0956-053X [Print] United States
PMID16839754 (Publication Type: Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't)
Chemical References
  • Soil
Topics
  • Agriculture
  • Colony Count, Microbial
  • Conservation of Natural Resources
  • Hot Temperature
  • Pectobacterium carotovorum (isolation & purification, pathogenicity)
  • Plants (microbiology)
  • Pseudomonas syringae (isolation & purification, pathogenicity)
  • Pythium (isolation & purification, pathogenicity)
  • Rhizoctonia (isolation & purification, pathogenicity)
  • Soil
  • Waste Management (methods)

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