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Can Compost Teas Help Flowers Battle
Blight?
By Marcia Wood May
24, 2005
Flowers and saplings may find tea refreshing.
Compost tea, that is.
These teas are made from compost "brewed" for at least 24 hours with
all-natural ingredients that boost growth of beneficial microbes living in the
compost. Compost teas may prove helpful in protecting wholesale and retail
nursery plants like rhododendrons, azaleas, viburnums and oak saplings from
what's known as ramorum blight, also called ramorum die-back or sudden oak
death. That's according to Agricultural Research Service (ARS) plant pathologist
Robert
G. Linderman at Corvallis, Ore.
The funguslike organism, Phytophthora ramorum, which causes
these diseases, has been found in at least 20 states. To prevent spread of
P. ramorum, more than one-half million otherwise-ready-to-sell plants
have had to be destroyed.
Some organic growers and home gardeners already apply compost teas by
either spraying them on foliage or drenching plant roots. And although reputed
to enhance plant growth and fend off disease, compost teas have not yet been
widely investigated by scientists. So Linderman and co-investigators are
studying compost teas as one of several materials that might provide an
effective, affordable, Earth-friendly alternative to chemical pesticides for
controlling P. ramorum.
In a preliminary experiment at the
Horticultural
Crops Research Laboratory, where Linderman is based, he and colleagues
treated rhododendron leaves indoors with a helpful bacterium, Paenibacillus
polymyxa, taken from compost. The researchers then inoculated the leaves
with the ramorum organism. The scientists found that P. polymyxa did not
protect the foliage, but they plan to test it again--and other potentially
protective microbes--using slightly different procedures.
Discoveries by ARS scientists at Corvallis and their colleagues at
other ARS labs on both coasts will be of benefit not only to the horticultural
crops industry--the fastest growing sector of American agriculture--but also to
home gardeners, who have made this pastime America's favorite hobby.
ARS is the U.S. Department of
Agriculture's chief scientific research agency.