Relationship between inoculum density and vector phenology on the incidence of potato virus Y in tobacco |
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Authors: | STEWART M GRAY E P LAMPERT |
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Institution: | Department of Entomology, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-7613, USA |
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Abstract: | The epidemiology of potato virus Y (PVY) in the tobacco crop, Nicotiana tabacum, was examined in the context of the seasonal abundance of aphid vectors, rate of disease progress, and disease gradient from a known virus source. The spring potato crop, Solanum tuberosum, was suspected of being the main source of inoculum; therefore, varying numbers of infected potato plants were used as the inoculum source in different test plots. A 3-wk lag phase was present in all disease progress curves prior to an exponential increase in disease incidence. The relatively low numbers of aphid vectors, primarily transient species, alighting on the crop during the lag phase were responsible for the primary spread of PVY from potato to tobacco. The arrival of large numbers of colonising aphid vectors, Myzus persicae, presumably from the harvested potatoes, coincided with the exponential increase in PVY incidence in tobacco. The initial number of potato plants infected with PVY was positively correlated with the final disease incidence, rate of disease progress, and the magnitude of radial dispersion of PVY into the tobacco. Aphid vector pressure was not a significant variable in the differences in spatial and temporal characteristics of PVY epidemics among test plots. |
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