Fusarium
Mycotoxins:


Vomitoxin



Nivalenol



Lycomarasmin



Fusariotoxin
T2-Toxin,



Fusaric Acid



Fumonisin B1


New! Fusarium mycotoxins: chemical names list.


Chemical Herbicides


Soil Solarization


Español


This site is supported by a grant from Drug Policy Reform Fund of the TIDES Foundation.

 

GENERA & SPECIES PROPOSED FOR USE AS MYCOHERBICIDES AGAINST DRUG PLANTS

Fusarium oxysporum:

"The genus Fusarium contains a number of species of moulds which have been recognised for a long time as being important plant pathogens responsible for wilts, blights, root rots and cankers in a very wide range of important crop plants, including trees. Species of Fusarium are world-wide in their distribution and may be isolated from soil and decaying organic material, particularly of plant origin. More recently the genus has acquired notoriety because of the ability of several species to produce toxic metabolites causing illness and even death in man and his domesticated animals.

Members of the genus also play a role in the biodegradation of organic materials, in the post—harvest spoilage of crops. and in the biodegradation of, for example, pharmaceutical products. Some species are pathogens of insects and others arc agents of human disease and possibly allergies.

Although these activities reflect adversely on the influence of the genus on the well-being of man, some aspects of the biology and biochemical versatility of Fusarium may be turned to benefit. Pathogenicity to insects may be used to control insect Pests, a number of secondary metabolites are of commercial value, and the primary metabolism of strains of at least one species has been utilised in the production of microbial biomass which can be readily converted into a wide range of foodstuffs."  The Applied Mycology of Fusarium, Moss and Smith, 1984, Cambridge University Press.

 

 

Pleospora papaveraceae: