Publication | Closed Access
Groundnut rosette and its assistor virus
83
Citations
12
References
1968
Year
Groundnut Rosette VirusBotanySummary Chlorotic RosetteEntomologyPathologyPlant PathologyPlant-pathogen InteractionPlant HealthPlant-virus InteractionDisease ControlPublic HealthPlant VirusVirologyPest ManagementGroundnut RosetteChlorotic RosetteBiologyPathogenesisCrop ProtectionMedicine
SUMMARY Chlorotic rosette from Malawi (isolate CR1), passed through Stylosanthes gracilis and S. juncea , was not subsequently transmissible from groundnuts (Arachis hypogaea) by Aphis craccivora or A. gossypii , but with S. mucronata transmissibility was occasionally regained after a period of time. Aphid transmissibility was similarly lost after passage of two isolates (a chlorotic rosette from Rhodesia, CR2, and a green rosette from Nigeria, GR) through soybean (Soja max) and after manual inoculation to groundnuts. Groundnut plants that remained symptomless after exposure to rosette infection by aphids often contained a virus that restored aphid transmissibility when introduced into groundnuts containing the vectorless virus from that isolate. Groundnut rosette disease therefore consists of a symptom‐inducing virus that we call groundnut rosette virus (GRV) and a symptomless assistor virus (GRAV) that must be present for aphid transmission. The interactions between the GRV and GRAV of chlorotic and green rosette, and their transmission by different vector races, are described.
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