Trichoderma Pseudomonas Bacillus for Lemongrass
ಹಂಚಿ
Lemongrass (Cymbopogon flexuosus and Cymbopogon citratus) is an important medicinal and aromatic crop cultivated for its fragrant leaves and essential oil rich in citral. The essential oil is widely used in perfumery, cosmetics, pharmaceuticals, aromatherapy, herbal products, food flavoring, beverages, soaps, detergents, and natural insect repellents. India is one of the leading producers of lemongrass oil, making it a highly profitable crop for farmers. High lemongrass productivity depends on healthy roots, biologically active soil, balanced nutrient availability, and a thriving microbial ecosystem that supports rapid establishment, vigorous tillering, healthy leaf production, efficient nutrient uptake, continuous biomass accumulation, and maximum essential oil synthesis. Since the leaves are harvested multiple times each year, maintaining healthy root systems and continuous vegetative growth is essential for sustained productivity. Lemongrass plantations are susceptible to several soil-borne diseases such as root rot, collar rot, wilt, damping-off in nurseries, and infections caused by Fusarium oxysporum, Rhizoctonia solani, Pythium species, Sclerotium rolfsii, Macrophomina phaseolina, and other soil-borne pathogens. These diseases damage the root system, reduce nutrient uptake, weaken plant vigor, decrease tillering, lower leaf biomass, and reduce essential oil yield and quality. A microbial consortium containing Trichoderma, Pseudomonas, and Bacillus provides a sustainable biological solution for maintaining healthy lemongrass fields and improving long-term soil fertility.
Trichoderma species such as Trichoderma viride and Trichoderma harzianum actively colonize the lemongrass rhizosphere and naturally compete with harmful fungi. They produce beneficial enzymes and secondary metabolites that suppress soil-borne fungal pathogens while stimulating root branching and improving nutrient absorption. Healthy root systems promote efficient water and nutrient uptake, vigorous tillering, enhanced leaf production, increased biomass, improved essential oil accumulation, and higher commercial yields.
Pseudomonas fluorescens is a beneficial rhizobacterium that rapidly colonizes lemongrass roots and establishes a protective microbial environment. It produces antimicrobial compounds, siderophores, hydrogen cyanide (HCN) in selected strains, and plant growth-promoting substances that improve nutrient availability while strengthening the plant's natural defense mechanisms. Pseudomonas supports healthy root development, maintains rhizosphere microbial balance, enhances nutrient use efficiency, and contributes to healthier lemongrass crops throughout the production cycle. It also plays an important role in integrated disease management by helping suppress root rot, wilt, damping-off, collar rot, and other soil-borne diseases.
Bacillus species including Bacillus subtilis and Bacillus amyloliquefaciens are highly valued for their spore-forming ability and excellent survival under diverse field conditions. These beneficial bacteria produce enzymes, antimicrobial metabolites, lipopeptides, and plant growth-promoting compounds that improve nutrient cycling, enhance phosphorus availability, stimulate root growth, and enrich soil microbial diversity. Their activity contributes to healthier lemongrass plants, stronger root systems, improved nutrient absorption, increased tillering, better leaf development, enhanced essential oil production, and sustainable crop productivity.
When applied together, Trichoderma, Pseudomonas, and Bacillus establish a balanced microbial ecosystem around lemongrass roots. Regular application through root slip treatment, root dipping, soil application, broadcasting with farmyard manure, drip irrigation, fertigation, or soil drenching helps establish beneficial microbial populations throughout the crop cycle.
This microbial consortium is particularly beneficial during planting, establishment, vegetative growth, repeated leaf harvesting, ratoon management, and post-harvest soil management. Combined with balanced fertilization, proper irrigation, residue management, organic matter incorporation, and good field sanitation, these beneficial microorganisms contribute to healthier lemongrass plants, improved biomass, enhanced essential oil quality, increased soil fertility, and sustainable lemongrass cultivation.
Benefits of Trichoderma + Pseudomonas + Bacillus for Lemongrass
- Promotes vigorous root establishment and healthy plant growth
- Enhances nutrient uptake and fertilizer use efficiency
- Supports beneficial soil microbial activity
- Naturally suppresses soil-borne fungal and bacterial pathogens
- Helps reduce root rot, collar rot, damping-off, wilt, and other root-associated diseases
- Encourages vigorous tillering and continuous leaf production
- Supports higher leaf biomass and essential oil accumulation
- Improves citral content, oil quality, and harvest performance
- Improves soil fertility and nutrient cycling
- Enhances tolerance to drought, heat, and environmental stress
- Suitable for organic and sustainable lemongrass farming
- Compatible with root dipping, slip treatment, soil application, drip irrigation, fertigation, field drenching, and compost incorporation
- Supports long-term soil health and higher lemongrass productivity