Pythium spp. are soil-borne pathogens that cause damping-off and root rot diseases in many plant species such as cucumber. In the current study, the effect of dried roots-stems and leaves of Ageratina adenophora (Sprengel) R. King and H. Robinson (=Eupatorium adenophorum Sprengel) alone and in combination with pyrogenic biomass biochar to control Pythium aphanidermatum (Edson) Fitz was assessed. In four treatments of leaves, roots-stems, leaves + biochar, and roots-stems + biochar, it was observed that the treatment with leaves at an Emax (maximal effective concentration on control fungi) of 79 g/kg of soil had the most antifungal effect on P. aphanidermatum. Also, the Cmax (the highest level of control) increased with time and reached 82.4% and 71% on days 30 and 60, respectively. The highest cucumber fresh fruit weight and the highest height of the stems in the greenhouse were observed in leaf treatment of A. adenophora. Biochar did not have any remarkable controlling effect on P. aphanidermatum, and its population increased. The main compounds extracted from the dried leaves and roots-stems of A. adenophora, including α-pinene, nonanone, hexahydronaphthalene, 3-undecanone, muurolene, and heneicosane, had antifungal properties. We concluded that the leaves of A. adenophora have the potential to be used as a bio-fumigant for P. aphanidermatum management.
Keywords: Ageratina adenophora; Pythium aphanidermatum; antifungal; biochar; main compounds.