Incidence and Effect of Heart Rot in Marayur Sandalwood (Santalum album L.) Reserve, Kerala, and Its Natural Durability Against Fungi

IF 1.5 4区 农林科学 Q2 FORESTRY
R. Sundararaj, Purushotham Swetha, S. Mondal, Mustypally Kantha Reddy, R. Raja Rishi, Narayanaswamy Mamatha
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Indian sandalwood (Santalum album L.) is a semi-parasitic tree, well known for its valuable sandalwood oil extracted from heartwood and roots. Extensive loss of heartwood as a result of its decay is observed in living trees and this has inspired the current study, to investigate the health of sandalwood in Marayur sandalwood forest reserves. Located in Kerala, India, the majority of the trees in Marayur are facing high mortality with the loss of heartwood. The current study evaluated the health status and heartwood-rot disease severity of each tree, which revealed that only 16.67 % of the total trees were healthy and 1.5 % of them were dead. Statistical analysis revealed increasing girth class of trees has a significant positive association with increased disease severity at a 0.05 level of significance. Laboratory analysis confirmed the presence of the major wood-rotters Allophoma tropica, Xylaria berteroi, Diaporthe sp., Fomes sp., Ganoderma appalanatum, and Trametes sp., and that they are collectively responsible for the heart rot. A durability assessment revealed sandalwood is highly resistant (durability class I) to white-rot fungi (viz., Trametes hirsutus and T. [Coriolus] versicolor) and moderately resistant (durability class II) to brown-rot fungi (Oligoporous placenta and Fomitopsis meliae). Study implications: This study highlights the health status and heart-rot disease severity of sandalwood trees in Marayur Forest Reserves. Of the total trees surveyed, about 1.5% mortality was observed and only 17% of the trees were devoid of any heart-rot symptoms. Allophoma tropica, Ganoderma applanatum, Xylaria berteroi isolate SR52, Diaporthe sp., Fomes sp., G. appalanatum, and Trametes sp. are typical species collectively responsible for the heart rot and this was found to be the case in our study. These findings will sensitize forest managers to the loss of valuable sandalwood and death of the trees due to the heart rot, thereby enabling them to take appropriate preventive measures. Also, the natural durability of sandalwood against brown- and white-rot fungi is reported for the first time, indicating that sandalwood falls in the resistance class I (highly resistant) against white-rot fungi (Trametes hirsutus and T. (Coriolus) versicolor) and resistance class II (resistant) against brown-rot fungi (Oligoporous placenta and Fomitopsis meliae).
檀香心脏腐病的发生及影响(檀香系列l)喀拉拉邦的储备及其抗真菌的天然耐久性
印度檀香(Santalum album L.)是一种半寄生树,以其从心材和根中提取的宝贵檀香油而闻名。在活着的树木中观察到由于其腐烂而导致的大量心材损失,这启发了当前的研究,以调查Marayur檀香森林保护区檀香的健康状况。位于印度喀拉拉邦的马拉亚尔,由于心材的流失,大多数树木都面临着高死亡率。本研究评估了每棵树的健康状况和心材腐病严重程度,结果表明,只有16.67%的树木是健康的,1.5%的树木是死亡的。统计分析显示,树木周长等级的增加与疾病严重程度的增加有显著的正相关,显著性水平为0.05。实验室分析证实了主要木腐菌Allophoma tropica、Xylaria berteroi、Diaporthe sp.、fomees sp.、灵芝(Ganoderma appalanatum)和Trametes sp.的存在,它们共同导致了心脏腐烂。耐久性评估显示檀香对白腐菌(即:对褐腐真菌(少孔胎盘菌和meliopsis)具有中等抗性(持久性II级)。研究意义:本研究强调了马拉尤尔森林保护区檀香树木的健康状况和心脏疾病严重程度。在调查的树木中,约1.5%的树木死亡,只有17%的树木没有任何心脏腐烂症状。热带Allophoma tropica、平顶灵芝(Ganoderma applanatum)、berteroi Xylaria SR52、Diaporthe sp.、formes sp.、G. appalanatum和Trametes sp.是导致心脏腐烂的典型物种,本研究也发现了这种情况。这些发现将使森林管理者认识到宝贵的檀香木的损失和树木因心脏腐烂而死亡,从而使他们能够采取适当的预防措施。此外,首次报道了檀香对褐腐和白腐真菌的天然耐久性,表明檀香对白腐真菌(Trametes hirsutus和T. (Coriolus) versicolor)的抗性等级为1级(高度抗性),对褐腐真菌(Oligoporous胎盘和Fomitopsis meliae)的抗性等级为2级(抗性)。
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来源期刊
Forest Science
Forest Science 农林科学-林学
CiteScore
2.80
自引率
7.10%
发文量
45
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Forest Science is a peer-reviewed journal publishing fundamental and applied research that explores all aspects of natural and social sciences as they apply to the function and management of the forested ecosystems of the world. Topics include silviculture, forest management, biometrics, economics, entomology & pathology, fire & fuels management, forest ecology, genetics & tree improvement, geospatial technologies, harvesting & utilization, landscape ecology, operations research, forest policy, physiology, recreation, social sciences, soils & hydrology, and wildlife management. Forest Science is published bimonthly in February, April, June, August, October, and December.
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