Biocontrol Potential of Raw Olive Mill Waste Against Verticillium dahliae in Vegetable Crops
Stefanos K. Soultatos, Anastasia Chatzaki, Panagiotis A. Karas, Anastasia A. Papadaki, Georgios S. Kalantzakis, Georgios Psarras, Dimitrios E. Goumas, Dimitrios G. Karpouzas, Emmanouil A. Markakis

TL;DR
Raw olive mill waste can protect vegetable crops from a harmful soil fungus, offering an eco-friendly alternative to chemicals.
Contribution
This study demonstrates the biocontrol potential of raw olive mill waste against Verticillium dahliae in vegetable crops.
Findings
Raw OMW significantly inhibits fungal growth, sporulation, and germination in vitro.
Soil application of OMW protects eggplant and tomato plants from V. dahliae.
Disease suppression is likely due to OMW's phenolic content and not microbial activity.
Abstract
Verticillium wilt caused by the soil-borne fungus Verticillium dahliae causes severe losses to a broad range of economically important crops worldwide. Chemical disease management is ineffective; thus, alternative control strategies are needed. Olive-producing countries face the challenge of managing olive mill wastewater (OMW) in an environmentally friendly and agronomically beneficial manner. The proper use of OMW supported by scientific research has been proposed as a valuable means for successful disease management. In this respect, we tested whether soil application of raw OMW can protect vegetable crops against V. dahliae and investigated the potential disease-suppressive mechanisms. OMW inhibited significantly fungal growth, sporulation, hyphae width, and conidial and microsclerotial germination in vitro, and these effects were dose-dependent. Moreover, the addition of OMW in the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant Pathogens and Fungal Diseases · Essential Oils and Antimicrobial Activity · Plant-Microbe Interactions and Immunity
