Determination of the allelopathic potential of Cambodia’s medicinal plants using the dish pack method

Yourk Sothearith, Kwame Sarpong Appiah, Hossein Mardani, Takashi Motobayashi, Suzuki Yoko, Khou Eang Hourt, Akifumi Sugiyama, Yoshiharu Fujii

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

10 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Plants produce several chemically diverse bioactive substances that may influence the growth and development of other organisms when released into the environment in a phenomenon called allelopathy. Several of these allelopathic species also have reported medicinal properties. In this study, the potential allelopathic effects of more than a hundred medicinal plants from Cambodia were tested using the dish pack method. The dish pack bioassay method specifically targets volatile allelochemicals. Twenty-five species were found to have significant inhibitory effects on lettuce radicle growth. Eleven different plant families, including Iridaceae (2), Apocynaceae (2), Poaceae (2), Sapindaceae, Araceae, Combretaceae, Orchidaceae, Clusiaceae, Zingiberaceae, Rutaceae and Aspara-gaceae had the plant species with high inhibitory effects. Allophyllus serrulatus had the highest growth inhibitory effect on lettuce radicles more than 60%, followed by Alocasia macrorrhiza, Iris pallida, Termi-nalia triptera, Wrightia tomentosa, Cymbidium aloifolium, Garcinia villersiana and Kaempferia parviflora. The candidate species were subjected to further studies to identify the volatile allelochemicals in the volatile constituents.

Original languageEnglish
Article number9062
JournalSustainability (Switzerland)
Volume13
Issue number16
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2 Aug 2021
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Allelochemicals
  • Allelopathy
  • Dish pack method
  • Volatile compounds

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