Abstract
The highest inhibition rate of conidial germination of Pyricularia oryzae was shown by extracts of rice plant leaves inoculated by a pathogen after treatment with probenazole, a rice blast controlling agent. Four anti-conidial germination substances were isolated from these extracts. Substances A, C and D inhibited the germination of the conidia at concentrations between 100 and 200 mcg/ml, and substance B caused morphological changes in the germination tubes of the conidia with a little inhibition of germination. These substances were differentiated from momilactone A, B and the degraded or metabolized products of probenazole. Besides anti-conidial germination activity, they showed antimicrobial activities against several kinds of phytopathogenic bacteria of fungi on agar plates by diffusion method.