The Effect of Compost, Host Resistance, and Chemical Treatment Interaction on Complex Wilt Disease Management on Hot Pepper (Capsicum annuum L.) in Jabi Tehena District, Northwestern Ethiopia
Mastewal Alehegn, Chemeda Fininsa, Habtamu Terefe, Mashilla Dejene, Wassu Mohammed

TL;DR
This study shows that using compost, resistant pepper varieties, and chemical treatments can effectively manage wilt disease and boost pepper yields in Ethiopia.
Contribution
The study introduces a combined strategy of compost, host resistance, and chemical treatment for managing hot pepper wilt disease.
Findings
Melka Zala variety with Apron Star treatment in compost-treated plots had the lowest disease severity and highest yield.
Compost-untreated plots with Mareko Fana variety showed the highest disease severity and slowest yield.
The combined treatment improved net benefit and marketable fruit yield by twice compared to other methods.
Abstract
Hot pepper is a vital vegetable crop traditionally valued for its commercial importance and role in rural economies, with its fruits consumed fresh, dried, processed, or used as condiments. Hot pepper wilt, a complex disease caused by various soilborne pathogens, significantly influenced hot pepper crops. This study is aimed at evaluating the combined effects of compost application, host resistance, and chemical treatments on seeds and seedlings in managing this disease, as well as its effect on yield. Eighteen treatment combinations were tested in a split–split plot design with three replications. The findings showed highly significant differences (p ≤ 0.001) in disease severity, area under disease progress curve (AUDPC), and agronomic traits across the treatment combinations. The study found that the Melka Zala variety, when treated with Apron Star and transplanted into…
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Taxonomy
TopicsPlant Pathogenic Bacteria Studies · Plant Virus Research Studies · Agricultural pest management studies
