scholarly journals Potential use of insecticides and mineral oils for the control of transmission of major aphid-transmitted potato viruses

2012 ◽  
Vol 27 (2) ◽  
pp. 97-106 ◽  
Author(s):  
Drago Milosevic ◽  
Svetomir Stamenkovic ◽  
Pantelija Peric

Viruses occurring in Serbia and other countries in the region are a huge problem constraining seed potato production. At lower altitudes, in lowland and hilly regions, where table potato production is widely distributed, more than 50% of healthy plants become infected with potato virus Y during one growing season. Under these conditions, seed potato production is hindered due to a high infection pressure of potato virus Y which spreads far more rapidly compared to leaf roll virus, virus S and other viruses hosted by this plant species. This study tended to clarify a frequent dilemma regarding the use of insecticides in preventing the infection of healthy plants with potato virus Y and leaf roll virus, given the oral and written recommendations from pesticide manufacturers, agronomists and scientists in the field of crop protection arising from a logical conclusion that aphid vector control results in virus transmission control. The present findings, which are in agreement with reports of authors from other countries, show that the use of insecticides is ineffective in preventing potato virus Y which is nonpersistently transmitted by aphids from an external source of infection. However, insecticides can exhibit efficacy in preventing potato virus Y transmission from infected plants to healthy plants within a crop, which can have an overall positive effect only if seed potato is grown in areas that have no external source of infection. The present results and those of other authors show that insecticides are effective in preventing the infection of healthy plants with persistently transmitted leaf roll virus. Mineral oils provide effective control of potato virus Y by preventing the infection of potato plants with the virus. They can be combined with other management practices to protect seed potato crops against the virus. Given the fact that the initial first-year infection of healthy potato plants with virus Y in relation to leaf roll virus is approximately 10-20:1 under conditions in Serbia, and that the use of insecticides fails to ensure protection against PVY, this practice cannot have any positive effect on virus control under high infection pressure conditions.


2014 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-19 ◽  
Author(s):  
Drago Milosevic ◽  
Slobodan Milenkovic ◽  
Pantelija Peric ◽  
Svetomir Stamenkovic

Aphids are the most important vectors of potato viruses during the crop?s growing season. The most widespread and damaging viruses, the potato virus Y and potato leaf roll virus, are transmitted by aphids in non-persistent and persistent manner, respectively. The two viruses cause the greatest concern of potato producers and a great constraint to seed potato production in Serbia, the region and across the world. Potato virus Y is particularly harmful, given its distribution and spreading rate. Seed potato production systems under well-managed conditions involve a series of virus control measures, including the monitoring of outbreaks of winged aphids, their abundance and species composition, in order to forecast virosis, i.e. potential plant and tuber infection periods. Monitoring the aphid vectors of potato viruses enables determination of optimum dates for haulm destruction when higher than normal numbers of winged aphids as vectors of economically harmful diseases have been observed. Haulm destruction in a potato crop reduces the risk of plant infection and virus translocation from the aboveground parts to tubers, thus keeping the proportion of infected tubers within tolerance limits allowed for certain categories of seed potatoes. This practice has positive effects if used in combination with other viral disease control measures; otherwise, it becomes ineffective. This paper provides an integral analysis of the effects and role of monitoring outbreaks of aphids, their abundance and species composition in timing haulm growth termination to prevent plant infection, virus translocation and tuber infestation in potato crops in Serbia and the wider region.



Plant Disease ◽  
2003 ◽  
Vol 87 (6) ◽  
pp. 679-685 ◽  
Author(s):  
R. P. Singh ◽  
D. L. McLaren ◽  
X. Nie ◽  
M. Singh

Surveys of commercial and seed potato fields for virus diseases (1998 to 2002) in Manitoba established that Potato virus Y (PVY) is of concern in seed potato production. To determine the prevalence of PVY strains, PVY-infected tubers identified by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) from surveys (2000 to 2001) were grown for symptom expression and strain characterization by strain-specific RT-PCR, bioassays, and serological assays. Of the samples collected (2000 to 2001) and tested by RT-PCR, 4.0% contained PVY. Further analysis of the PVY-positive samples by a duplex RT-PCR facilitating the simultaneous detection of common (PVYO) and tobacco veinal necrosis strains (PVYN/NTN) indicated that 37.5% contained PVYO and 63.5% contained PVYN-type isolates. Analysis of the PVYN-type samples using three monoclonal antibodies (MAbs) showed that all reacted with only the PVYO MAbs and not with the PVYN-specific MAb. Partial nucleotide sequences of both ends of PVY-RNA showed that the PVYN-type isolates resembled those reported in 1996 from Manitoba. These isolates are designated as PVYN:O. In view of the increased incidence of PVYN:O in one production area, seed tubers imported from other provinces of Canada and the neighboring United States were analyzed for PVYN:O. The PVYN:O was detected in imported seeds from Minnesota, Montana, and North Dakota.



Plant Disease ◽  
2013 ◽  
Vol 97 (3) ◽  
pp. 430-430 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Quintero-Ferrer ◽  
A. V. Karasev

Potato virus Y (PVY) is a serious problem for potato production worldwide. The virus reduces both tuber yield and quality, and recent spread of recombinant strains of PVY in potato production areas is largely credited with the spread of potato tuber necrotic ringspot disease (PTNRD) (1). In Mexico, recombinant strains of PVY were reported in at least two states, Chihuahua (4) and the State of Mexico (3); however, no surveys have been conducted in other potato-producing areas, and the spectrum of PVY isolates circulating in the country has remained uncharacterized. In October 2011, a small-scale survey of seed potato was conducted in the state of Jalisco, Mexico, to identify PVY isolates present in fields. Twelve seed potato fields were inspected visually. These represented various generations of seed potato, from nuclear to G2. Leaf samples were collected from plants displaying mosaic, crinkling, and yellowing symptoms, and were tested for PVY. Fifty samples were collected from cultivars Fabula, Mondial, Fianna, Gigant, Caesar, and Adora. Of the 50 leaf samples collected, seven were PVY-positive using the Immuno-strip Kit (Agdia, Elkhart, IN), and six of these were determined to have a N-serotype according to the typing by the Pocket Diagnostics lateral flow kit (Forsite Diagnostics, Ltd., York, UK). PVY-positive samples came from cultivars Fabula (2 with N serotype), Mondial (4 with N serotype), and Fianna (1 with O serotype). Extracts of the seven PVY-positive leaf samples were applied to Whatman FTA cards (Sigma, St. Louis, MO), dried, and transported to the Plant Virology Laboratory at the University of Idaho for further characterization. All samples immobilized on FTA cards were subjected to RNA extraction and standard reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR typing using a set of PVY-specific primers (2) to determine the strain type. All PVY isolates were recombinant. The six N-serotype samples were found to contain recombinant PVYNTN isolates and produced characteristic bands of 181 and 452 bp in RT-PCR, which indicated the presence of two recombination junctions in the HC-Pro/P3 and VPg regions typical of European PVYNTN isolates. The one O-serotype sample was identified as a recombinant PVYN-Wi/N:O isolate, and produced 181 and 689 bp bands in RT-PCR, which indicated the presence of one recombination junction in the HC-Pro/P3 region. Sequence analysis of RT-PCR products amplified from five samples with N serotype identified them as PVYNTN isolates, and from the one with O serotype identified it as PVYN-Wi/N:O isolate. Sequence comparisons confirmed that N serotype samples contained PVY isolates most closely related to typical PVYNTN sequences (Accession No. EF026075), while the O serotype sample contained the PVY isolate most closely related to PVYN-Wi from Europe (HE608963). The data obtained suggest the presence of two different types of PVY recombinants, PVYNTN and PVYN-Wi, in seed potato in Jalisco. Additional surveillance for these recombinant isolates may be needed, as well as a survey of their effects on tuber quality in production areas. This is the first report of recombinant isolates of PVY often associated with PTNRD circulating in seed potato in Jalisco, Mexico. References: (1) S. M. Gray et al. Plant Dis. 94:1384, 2010. (2) J. H. Lorenzen et al. Plant Dis. 90:935, 2006. (3) V. R. Ramirez-Rodriguez et al. Virol. J. 6:48, 2009. (4) L. Robles-Hernandez et al. Plant Dis. 94:1262, 2010.



2011 ◽  
Vol 54 (2) ◽  
pp. 105-117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stefania Rigotti ◽  
Carole Balmelli ◽  
Paul Gugerli


Plant Disease ◽  
2006 ◽  
Vol 90 (8) ◽  
pp. 1102-1105 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. M. Crosslin ◽  
P. B. Hamm ◽  
D. C. Hane ◽  
J. Jaeger ◽  
C. R. Brown ◽  
...  

Totals of 960 and 286 certified potato seed lots from locations across North America were planted in trials in Washington and Oregon, respectively, in 2001 to 2003 and tested for strains of Potato virus Y (PVY). The incidence of PVYO-infected lots averaged 16.4 and 25.9% in the Washington and Oregon trials, respectively. There was a general trend of increasing incidence of the PVYO, PVYN:O, and PVYN strains during this period, as evidenced by more infected cultivars, sites of seed origin, and number of seed growers providing infected seed lots. In particular, there was a dramatic increase in seed lots with the PVYN:O strain from 2002 to 2003. PVYN:O, in contrast to PVYO, which only causes yield reduction, also causes internal and external damage to tubers, making them unmarketable. In 2003, PVYN:O occurred in seed lots originating in eight states and three Canadian provinces. The increased incidence of PVYN:O was likely due to the difficulty in differentiating this strain from PVYO. The prevalence of PVY in potato seed lots documented herein poses a threat to potato production in the United States and suggests that current measures to reduce the incidence of this virus are inadequate.



Plant Disease ◽  
2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Pengcheng Ding ◽  
Dexin Chen ◽  
Haixu Feng ◽  
Jiao Li ◽  
Hui Cao ◽  
...  

Potato is an important crop in Shanxi province located in north-central China. During 2019-2020, 319 potato leaf samples were collected from eight locations distributed in three major potato production areas in Shanxi. Bio-chip detection kit revealed the presence of several potato viruses, and among them potato virus Y (PVY) was the most common one, reaching the incidence of 87.8% of all symptomatic samples. The immuno-captured multiplex reverse transcription (RT)-PCR was used to identify strains for all 280 PVY-positive samples, unveiling 242 samples infected with a single strain of PVY (86.4%) and 38 (13.6%) with a mixed infection. Of samples with a single-strain infection, PVY -SYR-II accounted for 102 (42.1%), followed by PVYN-Wi (33, 13.6%) , PVY -SYR-I (28, 11.6%), 261-4 (22, 9.1%), PVYNTNa (20, 8.3%), PVYNTNb (19, 7.9%), and PVY -SYR-III (18, 7.4%). Seven isolates representing different recombinants were selected for whole genome sequencing. Phylogenetic and recombination analyses confirmed the RT-PCR based strain typing for all seven strains of PVY found in Shanxi. SXKL-12 is the first SYR-III strain from potato reported from China. However, unlike that in other known SYR-III isolates, the region positioned from 1,764 to1,902 nt in SXKL-12 shared the highest sequence identity of 82.2% with an uncharacterized PVY isolate, JL-23, from China. Interestingly, the PVYN-Wi isolate SXZY-40 also possessed a more divergent sequence for the region positioned from 6,156 to 6,276 nt than other N-Wi isolates known to date, sharing the highest identity of 86.6% with an uncharacterized Chinese PVY isolate, JL-11. Pathogenicity analysis of dominant strains PVY -SYR-II and PVYN-Wi in six local popular potato cultivars revealed that Kexin 13, Helan 15 and Jizhangshu 12 were susceptible to these two strains with mild mottling or mosaic symptoms expression, while three cultivars, Jinshu 16, Qingshu 9, Xisen 6 were found fully resistant.



2014 ◽  
Vol 57 (1) ◽  
pp. 59-75 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. M. Kirchner ◽  
L. H. Hiltunen ◽  
J. Santala ◽  
T. F. Döring ◽  
J. Ketola ◽  
...  


Plant Disease ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 95 (10) ◽  
pp. 1279-1283 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. F. S. Mello ◽  
R. A. Olarte ◽  
S. M. Gray ◽  
K. L. Perry

Potato virus Y (PVY) is a reemerging problem in potato production in North America. Although the “ordinary” strain, PVYO, is still the dominant isolate in U.S. seed potatoes, the recombinant strain of the virus PVYN-Wi (= PVYN:O) has become widespread. An increase in the prevalence of a PVY strain could be due to differences in the efficiency of transmission by aphid vectors. The transmission efficiency by a clone of Myzus persicae was determined for five isolates each of PVYO and PVYN-Wi. An aphid transmission assay was developed based on the use of potato seedlings from true potato seed, allowing for greater control of plant age and growth stage. No apparent differences in transmission by M. persicae were observed. Single isolates of PVYO and PVYN-Wi were tested for their ability to be transmitted from potato to potato by five aphid species: Aphis glycines, A. gossypii, A. nasturtii, M. persicae, and Rhopalosiphum padi. Both PVY isolates showed a similar transmission phenotype in being transmitted efficiently by M. persicae but very poorly or not at all by A. glycines, A. gossypii, and R. padi. The aphid A. nasturtii transmitted both isolates with an intermediate level of efficiency. The data do not support a model for a differential aphid transmissibility being responsible for the increase in the prevalence of PVYN-Wi.



Plant Disease ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 100 (2) ◽  
pp. 292-297 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mohamad Chikh-Ali ◽  
Hayam Alruwaili ◽  
Dalton Vander Pol ◽  
Alexander V. Karasev

Potato virus Y (PVY) exists as a complex of strains, many of which are recombinants. The practical importance of PVY recombinant strains has increased due to their ability to induce potato tuber necrotic ring spot disease (PTNRD) that seriously affects tuber quality. In Saudi Arabia, potato production has increased fivefold during the last three decades, reaching 460,000 tons per year. Although PVY has been reported as one of the main viruses affecting potatoes, no information is available on PVY strains circulating in the country. In August 2014, a survey was conducted in a seed potato field at Al-Jouf, Saudi Arabia. PVY-positive samples selected based on visual symptoms and serological reactivity were subjected to strain typing using multiplex RT-PCR assays and were determined to represent recombinant PVY strains. Whole genome sequences were determined for two representative isolates, S2 and S9, through direct sequencing of a series of overlapping RT-PCR fragments for each isolate, and found to represent strains PVY-NE11 and PVYZ (SYR-III), respectively. One of the recombinant types, SYR-III, was previously found in nearby Syria and Jordan, but the second recombinant, PVY-NE11, was found before only in the United States. Both recombinants, PVY-NE11 and SYR-III, were previously found associated with PTNRD and thought to be rare. The current identification of PVY-NE11 and SYR-III in seed potato in a new geographic region suggests that these recombinants may not be as rare as previously believed. This is the first report on the occurrence of recombinant strains of PVY in potato in Saudi Arabia, and the first report on the PVY-NE11 strain of PVY found in potato outside of the United States.



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