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Assessing the susceptibility of chrysanthemum cultivars to tomato spotted wilt virus
Author(s) -
van de Fmjh Ferdi Wetering,
Posthuma,
Goldbach,
Krijn Peters
Publication year - 1999
Publication title -
plant pathology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.928
H-Index - 85
eISSN - 1365-3059
pISSN - 0032-0862
DOI - 10.1046/j.1365-3059.1999.00412.x
Subject(s) - biology , tomato spotted wilt virus , cultivar , chrysanthemum morifolium , plant virus , horticulture , botany , agronomy , virus , virology
Three methods were compared to assess the susceptibility of vegetatively propagated chrysanthemum to tomato spotted wilt tospovirus (TSWV): mechanical and thrips‐mediated inoculation of whole plants, and a leaf‐disc assay. As symptom expression was often poor or even absent, TSWV infections and subsequent susceptibility to TSWV were determined by ELISA. All 15 chrysanthemum cultivars tested were susceptible to TSWV, irrespective of their degree of vector resistance (based on feeding‐scar damage rates). Thrips‐mediated inoculation using different numbers of thrips revealed that 100% infection was obtained when plants were challenged by six thrips per plant, whereas 80 and over 50%, respectively, of the plants became infected when inoculated by a single male or female thrips. However, false negatives were scored even after intensive sampling because of erratic, cultivar‐specific and time‐dependent virus distribution after inoculation in the plants. Labour‐intensive samplings and long incubation periods could be overcome by a readily applicable leaf‐disc assay. This assay was as reliable as thrips‐mediated inoculation of whole plants, and its use is therefore favoured to assess chrysanthemum cultivars for TSWV susceptibility.