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Investigating biotic and abiotic components in Blenheim soil series (Typic Quartzipsamment) responsible for suppressing Basal Stem Rot (BSR) incidence in oil palm

thesis
posted on 2025-04-25, 06:32 authored by Yit Kheng Goh
Disease-suppressive Blenheim soil (DS-BhS) records lower incidences of Ganoderma basal stem rot (BSR) compared to disease-conducive Bernam soil (DC-BeS). The potential of DS-BhS in suppressing Ganoderma BSR incidence is of great interest. DS-BhS exhibits higher prokaryotic and eukaryotic diversity, soil pH, calcium content, actinomycete counts, disease-suppressive microbial taxa, and metabolically diverse bacterial taxa compared to DC-BeS. The naturally occurring microbiota in the DS-BhS aids in disease suppression. Introducing biocontrol agents isolated from DS-BhS to sterilized DS-BhS does not restore its suppressiveness, highlighting the importance of intact soil microbial biomass and activity for effective Ganoderma control.

History

Campus location

Malaysia

Principal supervisor

Adeline Ting

Additional supervisor 1

Qasim Ayub

Year of Award

2025

Department, School or Centre

School of Sciences (Monash University Malaysia)

Additional Institution or Organisation

School of Science

Course

Doctor of Philosophy

Degree Type

DOCTORATE

Faculty

Faculty of Science

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