Spatial Dynamics of Disease Symptom Expression DuringPhytophthoraEpidemics in Bell Pepper

1994 ◽  
Vol 84 (10) ◽  
pp. 1015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jean B. Ristaino
2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Diego F. Vasquez ◽  
Felipe Borrero-Echeverry ◽  
Diego F. Rincon

AbstractThe greenhouse whitefly (GWF), Trialeurodes vaporariorum (Westwood) (Hemiptera: Aleyrodidae) is rarely associated with potato plants yet is the only known vector of the Potato yellow vein virus (PYVV). A host shift related with vector’s cognition often requires neural alterations by the virus. However, PYVV, being semi-persistent, is not supposed to directly affect vector physiology. As such, we propose that changes in potato plants caused by PYVV infection should manipulate insect behaviour to increase transmission. Here, we studied the effect of PYVV infection and symptom expression on GWF biological parameters, and attraction towards infected and uninfected potato plants. We compared survival and development rates of GWF nymphs fed with PYVV-infected plants (symptomatic and asymptomatic) and healthy plants under controlled conditions. We also carried out free-choice tests to determine host preference of GWF adults as a function of PYVV infection and disease symptom expression. We found that PYVV infection (both symptomatic and asymptomatic) reduce GWF survival while increasing development time (in symptomatic plants). Combined, a prolonged development time and reduced survival should favour viral uptake and trigger migration of vectors from symptomatic plants short after acquiring the virus. We also found that symptom expression (yellowing) causes significantly greater GWF attraction and establishment compared to healthy or asymptomatic plants. Interestingly, we found that GWF adults that have previously fed on infected plants switch their host preference choosing and establishing on healthy potato plants, which clearly increases horizontal transmission rates. The mechanism through which this behavioural manipulation takes place is not yet well understood. Our results show that symptoms associated with PYVV infection may account for a set of behavioural modifications that make an improbable vector, such as the GWF, into an efficient agent that increases horizontal transmission rates of PYVV.HighlightsPYVD reduces the survival of GWF and increases development time when symptoms occurPYVD symptom makes potato, a non-host plant, attractive to GWFAfter feeding on infected plants, GWF preference changes to prefer uninfected plantsPYVV modulates GWF behaviour to enhance horizontal transmission between plants


2010 ◽  
Vol 100 (6) ◽  
pp. 582-592 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elena García-Cano ◽  
Jesús Navas-Castillo ◽  
Enrique Moriones ◽  
Rafael Fernández-Muñoz

Tomato chlorosis virus (ToCV) (genus Crinivirus, family Closteroviridae) is an emerging threat to tomato crops worldwide. Although symptoms on fruits are not obvious, yield losses occur through decreased fruit size and number. Control of ToCV epidemics is difficult because the virus is transmitted by several whitefly vector species and its relatively wide host range facilitates establishment in local wild reservoirs. Therefore, breeding for ToCV resistance offers the best control alternative. However, no sources for resistance are available thus far. Here, a screen of tomatoes and wild species relatives was performed in search of ToCV resistance. Two sources of resistance to ToCV were identified in this work, lines ‘802-11-1’ and ‘821-13-1’, each derived by two self-pollinations from ToCV asymptomatic plants of the population ‘IAC CN RT’ (derived from an interspecific hybrid Solanum lycopersicum × S. peruvianum accession LA0444) and accession LA1028 (S. chmielewskii), respectively. The resistance was expressed by impairing virus accumulation and disease symptom expression, both under natural infection and after challenging with ToCV in controlled inoculations. Genetic control of resistance to ToCV infection in ‘821-13-1’ was conferred by a major locus with mainly additive effects but also partial dominance for higher susceptibility. Also, an additive × dominance epistatic interaction with at least one additional gene was evident.


2016 ◽  
Vol 46 (184) ◽  
pp. 423-440 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kristina Dietz ◽  
Bettina Engels ◽  
Oliver Pye

This article explores the spatial dynamics of agrofuels. Building on categories from the field of critical spatial theory, it shows how these categories enable a comprehensive analysis of the spatial dynamics of agrofuels that links the macro-structures of the global political economy to concrete, place-based struggles. Four core socio-spatial dynamics of agrofuel politics are highlighted and applied to empirical findings: territorialization, the financial sector as a new scale of regulation, place-based struggles and transnational spaces of resources and capital flows.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document