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First Report of Iris yellow spot virus on Onion in New York.
C. A. Hoepting, Cornell University Cooperative Extension Vegetable Program,
12690 Rte. 31, Albion, NY 14411; H. F. Schwartz, Colorado State University, Fort
Collins 80523-1177; and H. R. Pappu, Washington State University, P.O. Box
646430, Pullman 99164-6430. Plant Dis. 91:327, 2007; published on-line as DOI:
10.1094/PDIS-91-3-0327A. Accepted for publication 4 November 2006.
Iris yellow spot virus (IYSV [family Bunyaviridae, genus
Tospovirus]), a potentially devastating disease of onion vectored by onion
thrips (Thrips tabaci Lindeman), has been reported from most states in
the western United States where significant onion production occurs, with the
most recent report from Texas (1). In June 2006, volunteer onion (Allium cepa)
plants in Orleans County, New York (Elba muckland) were found to have symptoms
indicative of IYSV infection. The scapes (seed stalks) of the volunteer onions
found at the edge of a cull pile from a 2005 onion crop exhibited diamond-shaped
lesions, each with a distinct green center and a double yellow border.
Approximately 25 of 100 plants of red and yellow onion cultivars exhibited
characteristic IYSV lesions. The cull pile was composed primarily of locally
grown onions, although a few of the bulbs were grown from imported bare-root
transplants imported from Arizona. Symptomatic plants tested positive for IYSV
using IYSV-specific antiserum from Agdia Inc. (Elkhart, IN) in a double-antibody
sandwich-ELISA. The presence of IYSV was verified by reverse transcription
(RT)-PCR using primers derived from the small RNA of IYSV (S-RNA). The primers
flanked the IYSV nucleocapsid (N) gene (5(prime)-TAA AAC AAA CAT TCA AAC AA-3(prime) and
5(prime)-CTC TTA AAC ACA TTT AAC AAG CAC-3(prime) (3). RT-PCR assays produced a PCR amplicon
of expected size (approximately 1.2 kb) and the product was cloned and
sequenced. Nucleotide sequence analysis confirmed the identity of the amplicon
as that of the IYSV S-RNA. Sequence comparisons showed 95 to 98% identity with
known IYSV N gene sequences available in GenBank. The virus is poorly
transmitted to onion by mechanical inoculation and we did not have access to a
noninfested colony of the onion thrips vector to transfer the virus from these
samples to noninfected onions. No asymptomatic plants were tested. Among the
onion-growing states in the eastern United States, IYSV has previously only been
reported from Georgia (2). To our knowledge, this is the first report of IYSV in
New York and the greater northeastern United States. The finding of this disease
in New York confirms further spread of the virus within North America and the
need for research to develop more effective management options to reduce the
impact of IYSV on onion crops.
References: (1) M. Miller et al. Plant Dis. 90:1359, 2006. (2) S. W.
Mullis et al. Plant Dis. 90:377, 2006. (3) H. R. Pappu et al. Arch. Virol.
151:1015, 2006.
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