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1.
Plant Dis ; 108(6): 1776-1785, 2024 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38243178

RESUMO

Sida golden mosaic virus (SiGMV), an obligate pathogen that infects snap beans (Phaseolus vulgaris), is known to infect prickly sida (Sida spinosa L.), which is a common weed in agricultural farms in Georgia. Prickly sida has also been reported as a suitable host of sweetpotato whitefly (Bemisia tabaci), the vector of SiGMV. Despite being a host for both SiGMV and its vector, the role of prickly sida as a reservoir and inoculum source for SiGMV in snap bean farms has not been evaluated. This study was conducted to document the occurrence of SiGMV-infected prickly sida plants and to assess its potential role as a source of SiGMV inoculum in snap bean farms. A survey of 17 commercial snap bean farms conducted in spring 2021 confirmed the presence of SiGMV-infected prickly sida in southern Georgia. In fall 2021 and 2022, on-farm field trials were conducted in four commercial farms where SiGMV-infected prickly sida plants were documented earlier as a part of survey in spring 2021. The spatial distribution and temporal patterns of adult whiteflies and SiGMV on snap bean were compared between macroplots (13.7 × 30.5 m) "with prickly sida" or "without prickly sida" that were at least 232 m apart from each other. We did not observe any consistent differences in counts of adult whiteflies between macroplots with or without prickly sida in the four commercial farms. SiGMV infection was detected earlier and with higher incidences in snap bean macroplots "with prickly sida" compared with macroplots "without prickly sida." An apparent disease gradient was observed in two of the four farms assessed. Higher SiGMV incidences were observed on the edges of macroplots "with prickly sida." These findings indicate prickly sida as a potential natural reservoir and a source for SiGMV spread in snap bean farms in southern Georgia.


Assuntos
Hemípteros , Phaseolus , Doenças das Plantas , Georgia , Doenças das Plantas/virologia , Animais , Phaseolus/virologia , Hemípteros/virologia , Fazendas , Insetos Vetores/virologia
2.
Phytopathology ; 110(6): 1199-1207, 2020 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-32133919

RESUMO

Management of disease affecting peanut in the southeastern United States has benefited from extensive field research identifying disease-associated risk factors since the 1990s. An assessment of risk factors associated with tomato spotted wilt (TSW), caused by tomato spotted wilt virus and spread exclusively by thrips, is available to growers through Peanut Rx, a tool developed to inform peanut management decisions. Peanut Rx provides an assessment of relative TSW risk as an index. The assessment provides information about the relative degree to which a field characterized by a specified suite of practices is at risk of crop loss caused by TSW. Loss results when infection occurs, and infection rates are determined, in part, by factors outside a grower's control, primarily the abundance of dispersing, viruliferous thrips. In this study, we incorporated meteorological variables useful for predicting thrips dispersal, increasing the robustness of the Peanut Rx framework in relation to variation in the weather. We used data from field experiments and a large grower survey to estimate the relationships between weather and TSW risk mediated by thrips vectors, and developed an addition to Peanut Rx that proved informative and easy to implement. The expected temporal occurrence of major thrips flights, as a function of heat and precipitation, was translated into the existing risk-point system of Peanut Rx. Results from the grower survey further demonstrated the validity of Peanut Rx for guiding growers' decisions to minimize risk of TSW.


Assuntos
Arachis , Tospovirus , Animais , Doenças das Plantas , Medição de Risco , Sudeste dos Estados Unidos
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