The American Phytopathological Society (APS) is a non-profit, professional, scientific organization dedicated to the study and control of plant diseases.
Copyright 1994-2008
The American Phytopathological Society
|
|
|
First Report of Iris yellow spot virus on Onion and Leek in Western
Oregon. D. H. Gent and R. R. Martin, United States Department of
Agriculture, Agricultural Research Service, Department of Botany and Plant
Pathology, Oregon State University, Corvallis 97331; and C. M. Ocamb, Department
of Botany and Plant Pathology, Oregon State University, Corvallis 97331. Plant
Dis. 91:468, 2007; published online as doi:10.1094/PDIS-91-4-0468A. Accepted for
publication 15 January 2007.
Onion (Allium cepa) and leek (Allium porrum) are grown on
approximately 600 ha in western Oregon annually for bulb and seed production.
During July and August of 2006, surveys of onion bulb crops and onion and leek
seed crops in western Oregon found plants with symptoms of elongated to
diamond-shaped, straw-colored lesions characteristic of those caused by Iris
yellow spot virus (IYSV) (1–4). Symptomatic plants were collected from
fields of an onion bulb crop, an onion seed crop, and two leek seed crops
located in Marion County. The onion bulb crop had been planted in the spring of
2006, and the onion and leek seed crops had been planted in the fall of 2005,
all direct seeded. Cultivar names were not provided for proprietary purposes.
Symptomatic plants in the onion bulb crop and leek seed crop generally were
found near the borders of the field. Disease incidence was less than 5% and
yield losses in these crops appeared to be negligible. In the onion seed crop,
symptomatic plants were found throughout the field and disease incidence was
approximately 20%. Approximately 1% of the onion plants in this field had large
necrotic lesions that caused the seed stalks (scapes) to lodge. The presence of
IYSV was confirmed from symptomatic leaves and scapes by ELISA (Agdia Inc.,
Elkhart, IN) using antiserum specific to IYSV. RNA was extracted from
symptomatic areas of onion leaves and scapes, and a portion of the nucleocapsid
gene was amplified by reverse transcription-PCR. The amplicons were sequenced
and found to share more than 99% nucleotide and amino acid sequence identity
with an onion isolate of IYSV from the Imperial Valley of California (GenBank
Accession No. DQ233475). In the Pacific Northwest region of the United States,
IYSV has been confirmed in the semi-arid regions of central Oregon (1), central
Washington (2), and the Treasure Valley of eastern Oregon and southwest Idaho
(3). To our knowledge, this is the first report of the disease on a host crop in
the mild, maritime region west of the Cascade Mountain Range and the first
report of IYSV on leek seed crops in the United States, which complements a
simultaneous report of IYSV on commercial leek in Colorado. The presence of IYSV
may have implications for the iris and other ornamental bulb industries in
western Oregon and western Washington. This report underscores the need for
further research to determine the impact of the disease on allium crops and
other hosts and the development of effective management programs for IYSV and
the vector, Thrips tabaci.
References: (1) F. J. Crowe and H. R. Pappu. Plant Dis. 89:105, 2005. (2)
L. J. du Toit et al. Plant Dis. 88:222, 2004. (3) J. M. Hall et al. Plant Dis.
77:952, 1993. (4) H. F. Schwartz et al. Plant Dis. 91:113, 2007.
|