The Major Postharvest Disease of Onion and Its Control with Thymol Fumigation During Low-Temperature Storage

Mycobiology. 2018 Sep 30;46(3):242-253. doi: 10.1080/12298093.2018.1505245. eCollection 2018.

Abstract

Onion (Allium cepa L.) is one of the major vegetable crops in Korea that are damaged and lost by pathogenic fungal infection during storage due to a lack of proper storage conditions. The aim of this study was to determine an appropriate control measure using thymol to increase the shelf life of onions. To control fungal infections that occur during low-temperature storage, it is necessary to identify the predominant fungal pathogens that appear in low-temperature storage houses. Botrytis aclada was found to be the most predominant fungal pathogen during low-temperature storage. The antifungal activity of the plant essential oil thymol was tested and compared to that of the existing sulfur treatments. B. aclada growth was significantly inhibited up to 16 weeks with spray treatments using a thymol solution. To identify an appropriate method for treating onions in a low-temperature storage house, thymol was delivered by two fumigation treatment methods, either by heating it in the granule form or as a solution at low-temperature storage conditions (in vivo). We confirmed that the disease severity was reduced up to 96% by fumigating thymol solution compared to the untreated control. The efficacy of the fumigation of thymol solution was validated by testing onions in a low-temperature storage house in Muan, Jeollanam-do. Based on these results, the present study suggests that fumigation of the thymol solution as a natural preservative and fungicide can be used as an eco-friendly substitute for existing methods to control postharvest disease in long-term storage crops on a commercial scale.

Keywords: Allium cepa; Botrytis aclada; fumigation; long-term storage; postharvest disease; sulfur; thymol.

Grants and funding

This work was supported by a special research grant [111071- 03-2-HD110] from Korea Institute of Planning and Evaluation for Technology of Food, Agriculture, Forestry and Fisheries (IPET). This work was partially supported by the Plasma Advanced Technology for Agriculture and Food (Plasma Farming) of National Fusion Research Institute of Korea (NFRI).