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Augusta disease in tulip - a reassessment
Authors:W P MOWAT
Institution:Scottish Horticultural Research Institute, Invergowrie, Dundee
Abstract:In an experiment in which the roots of field-grown tulip were commonly infected with tobacco necrosis virus (TNV), Augusta disease did not develop in the year of infection or when progeny bulbs were grown in the field or glass-house. When tulip bulbs of other stocks, including grades of 11 and 12 cm circumference, were forced, the disease developed sporadically, in some instances as the result of infection with TNV from the soil in which they were planted and in others as a result of infection by bulb-borne virus. The incidence of disease produced by current year infection was increased by warming the plunge bed. Different strains of TNV were obtained from field-grown plants with Augusta disease and different strains of the virus produced the disease when inoculated to tulip. Some, but not all, naturally diseased plants contained satellite virus, which therefore does not cause or prevent disease development. The disease was produced in some plants by TNV transmitted by Olpidium brassicae, but neither a vector nor a non-vector isolate of O. brassicae completed its life cycle in tulip. However, Olpidium-like zoospores were observed in some washings of tulip roots from TNV-infested soils. TNV was not obtained from all tulip plants with necrotic leaf symptoms resembling Augusta disease. Some were infected with tomato bushy stunt virus or cucumber mosaic virus, or with another agent that was transmitted by inoculation of sap to Nicotiana clevelandii and Chenopodium quinoa, and carried by bulbs of up to 11 cm circumference.
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