American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry

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Evaluation of Culture Media for Biomass Production of Trichoderma viride (KBN 24) and their Production Economics

Received: 27 November 2014    Accepted: 22 December 2014    Published: 05 February 2015
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Abstract

The Genus Trichoderma is of immense importance in agricultural crop protection because of their bio-control potential role against an array of phytopathogens through several modes of action. It is well established with fairly good acceptability, worldwide. The establishment and utilization on a commercial level of any promising isolate may not be successful, unless the cost effective mass production is evident. Present study is aimed at the evaluation of the laboratory media as well as locally available food grains for cost effective mass production of local strain KBN-24 (Trichoderma viride) for large scale adoption. Among different lab media, potato dextrose agar (solid medium) and potato dextrose broth (liquid medium) yielded comparatively more biomass of tested strain of Trichoderma viride. However, among the different grains rice ranked the first which produced the maximum biomass (148.04 gram) followed by wheat (126.87 gram) where as maize produced the least biomass. Similar trends were recorded on the conidial production and colony forming units (CFUs) in case of potato dextrose agar, potato dextrose broth and rice whole grain. Results indicated that the locally available food grains like rice and wheat were comparatively cheaper and serve as convenient substrates for the mass multiplication of Trichoderma viride and their cost economics were also discussed.

DOI 10.11648/j.ajaf.20140206.24
Published in American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry (Volume 2, Issue 6, November 2014)
Page(s) 317-320
Creative Commons

This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution and reproduction in any medium or format, provided the original work is properly cited.

Copyright

Copyright © The Author(s), 2024. Published by Science Publishing Group

Keywords

Trichoderma Viride, Mass Multiplication, Culture Media, Production Economics

References
[1] S. Roy, A. Mukhopadhyay and G. Gurusubramanian. (2011) Resistance to insecticides in field collected population of tea mosquito bug (Helopeltis theivora Waterhouse) from the Dooars (North Bengal, India) tea cultivations. J. Entomol. Res. Soc., 13(2): 37-44.
[2] F.C. Dominguesa, J.A. Queiroza, J. M. S. Cabralb and L. P. Fonsecab. (2000) The influence of culture conditions on mycelial structure and cellulose production by Trichoderma reesei rut C-30. Enz. Microbial Technol. 26: 394-401.
[3] B. K. Borthakur and P. Dutta. (2011) Disease management in tea, In Tea field management, Tea Research Association, Tocklai Experimental Station, Jorhat -785 008, Assam, India, pp. 182-188.
[4] E. Esposito and M. da Silva. (1998) Systematics and environmental application of the genus Trichoderma. Crit. Rev. Microbiol. 24:89-98.
[5] G.S. Kocher, K.L. Kalra, G. and Banta. (2008) Optimization of cellulase production by submerged fermentation of rice straw by Trichoderma harzianum Rut-C 8230. Int. J. Microbiol. 5(2): 8230.
[6] N. Subash, J. Viji, C. Sasikumar, and M. Meenakshisundaram. (2013) Isolation, media optimization and formulation of Trichoderma harzianum in agricultural soil. Journal of Microbiology and Biotechnology Research.3 (1): 61-64.
[7] Mridula Khandelwal, Sakshi Datta, Jitendra Mehta, Ritu Naruka, Komal Makhijani, Gajendra Sharma, Rajesh Kumar and Subhas Chandra. (2012) Isolation, characterization & biomass production of Trichoderma viride using various agro products- A biocontrol agent. Advances in Applied Science Research, 2012, 3 (6):3950-3955.
[8] D. Ajay, J. S. Bisen, M. Singh, R. Saha and B. Bera. (2013) Evaluation of various plant residues in tea plantations of Darjeeling for on farm production of Trichoderma harzianum. Indian Journal of research and practices. 1: 1-4.
[9] Prashant Pingolia, Rohini Maheshwari, Narendra Vaishnav, Gajendra P. Sharma and Jitendra Mehta. (2013) Mycelium growth of Trichoderma viride (Biocontrol agent) on different agar medium. International Journal of Recent Biotechnology. 1 (1): 43-47.
[10] G. C. Papavizas, M. T. Dunn, J. A. Lewis and J. Beagle-Ristaino. (1984) Liquid fermentation technology for experimental production of biocontrol fungi. Phytopathology. 74:1171-1175.
[11] K. Nagur Babu, and P.N. Pallavi. (2013) Isolation, identification and mass multiplication of Trichoderma an important bio-control agent. International Journal of pharmacy and life sciences. 4(1): 2320-2323.
[12] P. J. Chaudhari, Prashant Shrivastava and A. C. Khadse. (2011) Substrate evaluation for mass cultivation of Trichoderma viride. Asiatic Journal of Biotechnology Resources. 2(04): 441-446.
Author Information
  • Tea Research Association, North Bengal Regional Research & Development Centre, Nagrakata, District – Jalpaiguri, West Bengal – 735 225, India

  • Tea Research Association, North Bengal Regional Research & Development Centre, Nagrakata, District – Jalpaiguri, West Bengal – 735 225, India

  • Tea Research Association, North Bengal Regional Research & Development Centre, Nagrakata, District – Jalpaiguri, West Bengal – 735 225, India

  • Tea Research Association, North Bengal Regional Research & Development Centre, Nagrakata, District – Jalpaiguri, West Bengal – 735 225, India

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    Kishor Chand Kumhar, Azariah Babu, Mitali Bordoloi, Ashif Ali. (2015). Evaluation of Culture Media for Biomass Production of Trichoderma viride (KBN 24) and their Production Economics. American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry, 2(6), 317-320. https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajaf.20140206.24

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    ACS Style

    Kishor Chand Kumhar; Azariah Babu; Mitali Bordoloi; Ashif Ali. Evaluation of Culture Media for Biomass Production of Trichoderma viride (KBN 24) and their Production Economics. Am. J. Agric. For. 2015, 2(6), 317-320. doi: 10.11648/j.ajaf.20140206.24

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    AMA Style

    Kishor Chand Kumhar, Azariah Babu, Mitali Bordoloi, Ashif Ali. Evaluation of Culture Media for Biomass Production of Trichoderma viride (KBN 24) and their Production Economics. Am J Agric For. 2015;2(6):317-320. doi: 10.11648/j.ajaf.20140206.24

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  • @article{10.11648/j.ajaf.20140206.24,
      author = {Kishor Chand Kumhar and Azariah Babu and Mitali Bordoloi and Ashif Ali},
      title = {Evaluation of Culture Media for Biomass Production of Trichoderma viride (KBN 24) and their Production Economics},
      journal = {American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry},
      volume = {2},
      number = {6},
      pages = {317-320},
      doi = {10.11648/j.ajaf.20140206.24},
      url = {https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajaf.20140206.24},
      eprint = {https://download.sciencepg.com/pdf/10.11648.j.ajaf.20140206.24},
      abstract = {The Genus Trichoderma is of immense importance in agricultural crop protection because of their bio-control potential role against an array of phytopathogens through several modes of action. It is well established with fairly good acceptability, worldwide. The establishment and utilization on a commercial level of any promising isolate may not be successful, unless the cost effective mass production is evident. Present study is aimed at the evaluation of the laboratory media as well as locally available food grains for cost effective mass production of local strain KBN-24 (Trichoderma viride) for large scale adoption. Among different lab media, potato dextrose agar (solid medium) and potato dextrose broth (liquid medium) yielded comparatively more biomass of tested strain of Trichoderma viride. However, among the different grains rice ranked the first which produced the maximum biomass (148.04 gram) followed by wheat (126.87 gram) where as maize produced the least biomass. Similar trends were recorded on the conidial production and colony forming units (CFUs) in case of potato dextrose agar, potato dextrose broth and rice whole grain. Results indicated that the locally available food grains like rice and wheat were comparatively cheaper and serve as convenient substrates for the mass multiplication of Trichoderma viride and their cost economics were also discussed.},
     year = {2015}
    }
    

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  • TY  - JOUR
    T1  - Evaluation of Culture Media for Biomass Production of Trichoderma viride (KBN 24) and their Production Economics
    AU  - Kishor Chand Kumhar
    AU  - Azariah Babu
    AU  - Mitali Bordoloi
    AU  - Ashif Ali
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    DO  - 10.11648/j.ajaf.20140206.24
    T2  - American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry
    JF  - American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry
    JO  - American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry
    SP  - 317
    EP  - 320
    PB  - Science Publishing Group
    SN  - 2330-8591
    UR  - https://doi.org/10.11648/j.ajaf.20140206.24
    AB  - The Genus Trichoderma is of immense importance in agricultural crop protection because of their bio-control potential role against an array of phytopathogens through several modes of action. It is well established with fairly good acceptability, worldwide. The establishment and utilization on a commercial level of any promising isolate may not be successful, unless the cost effective mass production is evident. Present study is aimed at the evaluation of the laboratory media as well as locally available food grains for cost effective mass production of local strain KBN-24 (Trichoderma viride) for large scale adoption. Among different lab media, potato dextrose agar (solid medium) and potato dextrose broth (liquid medium) yielded comparatively more biomass of tested strain of Trichoderma viride. However, among the different grains rice ranked the first which produced the maximum biomass (148.04 gram) followed by wheat (126.87 gram) where as maize produced the least biomass. Similar trends were recorded on the conidial production and colony forming units (CFUs) in case of potato dextrose agar, potato dextrose broth and rice whole grain. Results indicated that the locally available food grains like rice and wheat were comparatively cheaper and serve as convenient substrates for the mass multiplication of Trichoderma viride and their cost economics were also discussed.
    VL  - 2
    IS  - 6
    ER  - 

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