About this Research Topic
Bananas and plantains are highly susceptible to diseases due to monoculture cultivation and the lack of sexual recombination. The most hazardous fungal pathogens are Fusarium oxysporum f. sp. cubense (FOC), causing Panama disease, and Mycosphaerella musicola and M. fijiensis, causing yellow and black Sigatoka, respectively. Fungicide control of FOC is often difficult, and thus fungicide resistance management strategies are ineffective. In particular, M. fijiensis bears a high resistance risk and its control requires sound strategies. Also, Bananas are susceptible to diseases caused by viruses, bacteria, and other fungi. Therefore, research into the prevention and control of banana diseases is critical to ensuring the healthy development of the banana industrial system.
This Research Topic welcomes original research articles, reviews, meta-analyses, short communications, perspectives, and opinion papers dealing with applied scientific aspects of banana plant pathology, plant health, plant protection, etc. Research articles submitted to this Research Topic must be hypothesis-driven and contain innovative microbiological discoveries that address the fundamental mechanics of microbial life at the molecular, cellular, and multicellular levels in banana disease management. Sub-topics can be, but are not limited to, as follow:
- The examination of pathogenic and symbiotic relationships between microbes and their hosts
- The exploration of the complexities of the microbiome and the genetic, physiological as well as virulence mechanisms that shape host-microbe relationships
- Reports about antimicrobial chemicals and their resistance mechanisms
In addition, we have a significant interest in reports on banana disease control and integrated management using new technologies such as nanobiotechnology.
Keywords: Banana diseases, Antagonistic strain, Biocontrol agents, Screening, Inhibition mechanism
Important Note: All contributions to this Research Topic must be within the scope of the section and journal to which they are submitted, as defined in their mission statements. Frontiers reserves the right to guide an out-of-scope manuscript to a more suitable section or journal at any stage of peer review.