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VIRUSES CAUSING ROSETTE AND OTHER DISEASES IN GROUNDNUTS
Author(s) -
STOREY H. H.,
RYLAND AUDRIE K.
Publication year - 1957
Publication title -
annals of applied biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.677
H-Index - 80
eISSN - 1744-7348
pISSN - 0003-4746
DOI - 10.1111/j.1744-7348.1957.tb00473.x
Subject(s) - rosette (schizont appearance) , mottle , biology , aphis craccivora , chlorosis , inoculation , virus , plant virus , virology , virus diseases , botany , horticulture , homoptera , aphididae , pest analysis , immunology
From plants with a form of groundnut rosette disease, characterized by discrete areas of green and chlorotic tissue on the leaflets and here designated ‘mosaic rosette’, a virus was separated that produced only a mild mottle or sometimes a mottle with rare chlorotic flecks. It was separated by leaf grafts, by mechanical inoculation and by Aphis craccivora . Plants inoculated simultaneously with the mottle virus and normal rosette virus usually developed the mosaic‐rosette symptoms. When the mottle virus was introduced 14–35 days before the rosette virus, the plants failed to develop the severe chlorosis of rosette; the mottle virus thus protected the plant from rosette, and this was true whether the rosette virus was inoculated by aphids or by grafting. Plants showing two other forms of mild mottle were collected in the field; viruses from them were readily transmitted by grafting or by mechanical inoculation, but not by A. craccivara . In plant‐protection tests with one of these, it failed to protect plants from developing chlorotic symptoms when later inoculated with the rosette virus, although a form of interaction was evident and the doubly‐infected plant was less severely chlorotic and less stunted than one infected with the rosette virus alone.

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