Author:
Choi In-Ho,Park Ju-Yong,Shin Sang-Chul,Park Il-Kwon
Abstract
Abstract
Extracts from 40 medicinal plant species in 27 families were tested for their
nematicidal activity against the pine wood nematode, Bursaphelenchus
xylophilus, in 96-well plate bioassays. Responses varied with plant material
and concentration. Extracts of Acorus gramineus (Araceae), Asiasarum
sieboldi (Aristolochiaceae), Illicium verum (Illicaiceae) and Kaempferia
galanga (Zingiberaceae) showed nematicidal activity against male, female and
juvenile nematodes of B. xylophilus at 2000 μg ml−1. Among test plant
species, Kaempferia galanga showed the most potent nematicidal activity. As
K. galanga was the most nematicidally active of the 40 species, the extracts
were chromatographically fractionated and two cinnamates, ethyl
trans-cinnamate and ethyl p-methoxycinnamate, were discovered to be
responsible for much of the activity. The nematicidal activity of ethyl
trans-cinnamate and ethyl p-methoxycinnamate was 100% at 60 μg ml−1.
Subject
Agronomy and Crop Science,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics