Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: http://repository.i3l.ac.id/jspui/handle/123456789/1316
Title: Assessment of Coccinia grandis’ Leaf Extract Herbicide Potential on the Growth of Nicotiana tabacum and Brachiaria humidicola Using Foliar Spray Method
Authors: Harsono, Amabel Audrey
Keywords: Coccinia grandis
bioherbicide
Nicotiana tabacum
Brachiaria humidicola
allelopathic compounds
Issue Date: 31-Aug-2025
Publisher: i3L Press
Series/Report no.: BT25-004;T202512112
Abstract: Coccinia grandis is a plant species commonly found in tropical areas, such as Indonesia. While C. grandis, also known as ivy or scarlet gourd, is recognized as a medicinal plant, the species is invasive due to its rapid growth, preventing nutrient absorption by the nearby plant community. To solve this invasiveness, C. grandis can be employed as a source of phytochemicals for herbicide development, such as flavonoids, glycosides, terpenoids, phenolic compounds, and saponins. The bioherbicidal leaf extract of C. grandis, obtained through Soxhlet extraction, was tested against soil-grown dicot and monocot model plants, Nicotiana tabacum and Brachiaria humidicola, using the foliar spray method. The results from 14-days cultivation showed that the application of leaf extract during pre-emergence state yielded the highest percentage inhibition, with the two plants inhibited by 62.41% and 89.86%, respectively, at a 30% (w/v) extract concentration. These are significantly different from those obtained from post-emergence treatment, which were 65.57% and 55.56%, respectively. The results further indicated a more significant impact of C. grandis leaf extract on monocotyledonous plants, resembling grass-type weeds, than dicotyledonous plants. The application of leaf extracts also affected the overall biomass weight, with a significant decrease observed in the pre-emergence treatment compared to the post-emergence treatment, yielding p-values of <0.0001 for both model plants. The results of this study propose the potential of C. grandis as a bioherbicide, an alternative for sustainable weed management in the fight against the rise of herbicide resistance.
URI: http://repository.i3l.ac.id/jspui/handle/123456789/1316
Appears in Collections:Biotechnology

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