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First Report of Alfalfa mosaic virus in Physostegia virginiana

January 2002 , Volume 86 , Number  1
Pages  72.4 - 72.4

L. Cardin and J.-P. Onesto , INRA, IPSMV Phytopathologie, Villa Thuret, BP2078, F-06606 Antibes cedex, France ; and B. Moury , INRA, Station de Pathologie Végétale, BP94, F-84143 Montfavet cedex, France



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Accepted for publication 11 November 2001.

Physostegia virginiana Benth. (false dragon head) is a perennial plant from the family Lamiaceae cultivated as an ornamental in gardens and for cut-flower production. In 2000, stunting of plants and yellow-to-brown ringspots on leaves were observed in cut-flower production in the Alpes Maritimes Department (southeast France). These symptoms greatly decreased the commercial value of the stems. The disease was attributed to Alfalfa mosaic virus (AMV) because extracts of infected plant tissues revealed typical bacilliform particles by electron microscopy, produced symptoms typical of AMV after inoculation of a range of previously described test plants (1), and reacted positively in enzyme-linked immunosorbent assays (ELISA) with antibodies raised to a tomato strain of AMV (from G. Marchoux, INRA, France). After isolation from single local lesions on Vigna unguiculata, the AMV isolate was multiplied in cv. Xanthinc tobacco, where it induced local and systemic ringspot symptoms. Infected Xanthinc plants served as sources of inocula for subsequent mechanical- and aphid (Myzus persicae)-transmission tests to healthy seedlings of P. virginiana (seeds from the botanic garden of Nancy, France; 36 plants for each inoculation procedure). Chlorotic and necrotic local lesions were observed in 25% of mechanically inoculated plants. Three months after inoculation, uninoculated leaves of all mechanically inoculated plants and 30.5% of aphid-inoculated plants tested positive for AMV based on ELISA. During the first year after inoculation, less than 10% of infected plants showed typical systemic symptoms. This proportion reached 40% during the second year. Recently, we observed similar symptoms in P. virginiana plants cultivated in public gardens in Intercourse (Pennsylvania), Toronto (Ontario, Canada) and Montreal (Quebec, Canada). Using ELISA, AMV was detected in symptomatic plants from these three additional locations.

Reference: (1) L. Cardin and B. Moury. Plant Dis. 84:594, 2000.



© 2002 The American Phytopathological Society