scispace - formally typeset
Search or ask a question

Showing papers in "Annals of Applied Biology in 1981"


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Plant endoparasitic nematodes of the family Heteroderidae and some family Tylenchidae have evolved the ability to induce morphological changes in host cells to form feeding sites.
Abstract: PLant endoparasitic nematodes of the family Heteroderidae and some family Tylenchidae have evolved the ability to induce morphological changes in host cells to form feeding sites...

269 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Apterous Rhopalosiphum padi on the first leaf of cereal plants, developed faster and were more fecund at seedling to stem extension of barley, at tillering to earing of oats and at stem extension and Earing of wheat.
Abstract: SUMMARY Apterous Rhopalosiphum padi on the first leaf of cereal plants, developed faster and were more fecund at seedling to stem extension of barley, at tillering to earing of oats and at stem extension and earing of wheat. Feeding site on a mature plant also affected the rate of development and fecundity of the aphids; the largest and most fecund developed on the stems of oat and wheat plants. The consequences of these variations in reproductive performance are discussed in relation to the population dynamics of R. padi and its possible pest status in Britain.

98 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Adult individuals of honey bee colonies in Britain are commonly infected with several small RNA viruses, including black queen cell virus and bee virus Y, which occur most frequently about June, together with Nosema apis with which both viruses are intimately but independently associated.
Abstract: SUMMARY Adult individuals of honey bee colonies in Britain are commonly infected with several small RNA viruses. Black queen cell virus and bee virus Y are the commonest and occur most frequently about June, together with Nosema apis with which both viruses are intimately but independently associated. Bee virus X is less common than bee virus Y and showed no pronounced seasonal fluctuations in local surveys, but was detected mostly in winter and early spring. Sacbrood virus occurred in adults of most local colonies in summer, chronic paralysis virus and cloudy wing particle occurred commonly but without seasonal variations and acute paralysis occurred commonly throughout the active season of bees but does not multiply sufficiently to cause overt disease. Slow paralysis virus was rare.

97 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A technique was developed and deployed in central Illinois to trap and assay aphid alatae for incidence of soybean mosaic virus (SMV) transmission among naturally occurring transient aphid populations downwind of a field of infected soybean.
Abstract: SUMMARY A technique was developed and deployed in central Illinois to trap and assay aphid alatae for incidence of soybean mosaic virus (SMV) transmission among naturally occurring transient aphid populations downwind of a field of infected soybean. In a 2-yr study, 1709 alate aphids were trapped alive and assayed, 4.2% of which transmitted SMV. Five species of aphids accounted for more than 93% of the transmissions: Aphis craccivora Koch, Macrosiphum euphorbiae (Thomas), Myzus persicae (Sulzer), Rhopalosiphum maidis (Fitch), and Rhopalosiphum padi (L.). At least 55 additional species were assayed, five of which transmitted only once. Others did not transmit. Because virus infection during the early growth stages of soybean increases the loss of yield and the percentage of seed-borne virus, vector species that tend to fly middle to late spring are, from an economic point of view, more important in the spread of SMV. R. maidis flew in mid- to late summer and in autumn. R. padi was not abundant at any time of year and its transmission efficiency was low. M. persicae tended to fly in mid summer. Two species (A. craccivora and M. euphorbiae) which had major flights in late spring and early summer and relatively high transmission efficiencies are potentially important in the economic spread of SMV in central Illinois. A third species, Aphis citricola Van der Goot, may also be important because it flies in late spring and laboratory data suggest it is a relatively efficient vector of SMV. A. citricola was not assayed by our technique because we trapped in the morning and this species appears to fly later in the day.

97 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Results are compatible with a model in which much of the PLRV in aphids during the second phase is in the haemocoele, and transmission is mainly limited by the rate of passage of virus particles from haemolymph to saliva.
Abstract: SUMMARY Enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) was adapted for the efficient detection and assay of potato leafroll virus (PLRV) in aphids. Best results were obtained when aphids were extracted in 0.05 M phosphate buffer, pH 7.0, and the extracts incubated at 37 °C for 1 h before starting the assay. Using batches of 20 green peach aphids (Myzus persicae), about 0.01 ng PLRV/aphid could be detected. The virus could also be detected in single aphids allowed a 1-day acquisition access period on infected potato leaves. The PLRV content of aphids depended on the age of potato source-plants and the position of source leaves on them. It increased with increase in acquisition access period up to 7 days but differed considerably between individual aphids. A maximum of 7 ng PLRV/aphid was recorded but aphids more usually accumulated about 0.2 ng PLRV per day. When aphids were allowed acquisition access periods of 1–3 days, and then caged singly on Physalis floridana seedlings for 3 days, the PLRV content of each aphid, measured subsequently, was not strongly correlated with the infection of P. floridana. The concentration of PLRV in leaf extracts differed only slightly when potato plants were kept at 15, 20, 25 or 30 °C for 1 or 2 wk, but the virus content of aphids kept on leaves at the different temperatures decreased with increase of temperature. PLRV was transmitted readily to P. floridana at all temperatures, but by a slightly smaller proportion of aphids, and after a longer latent period, at 15 °C than at 30 °C. The PLRV content of M. persicae fed on infected potato leaves decreased with increasing time after transfer to turnip (immune to PLRV). The decrease occurred in two phases, the first rapid and the second very slow. In the first phase the decrease was faster, briefer and greater at 25 and 30 °C than at 15 and 20 °C. No evidence was obtained that PLRV multiplies in M. persicae. These results are compatible with a model in which much of the PLRV in aphids during the second phase is in the haemocoele, and transmission is mainly limited by the rate of passage of virus particles from haemolymph to saliva. The potato aphid, Macrosiphum euphorbiae, transmitted PLRV much less efficiently than M. persicae. Its inefficiency as a vector could not be ascribed to failure to acquire or retain PLRV, or to the degradation of virus particles in the aphid. Probably only few PLRV particles pass from the haemolymph to saliva in this species. The virus content of M. euphorbiae collected from PLRV-infected potato plants in the field increased from early June to early July, and then decreased. PLRV was detected both in spring migrants collected from the plants and in summer migrants caught in yellow water-traps. PLRV was also detected in M. persicae collected from infected plants in July and August, and in trapped summer migrants, but their PLRV content was less than that of M. euphorbiae, and in some instances was too small for unequivocal detection.

88 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Solutions of these equations indicate that disease amelioration can usually be expected in such mixtures, confirming the conclusions of the discrete model and that disease levels will deviate around the geometric, rather than arithmetic, mean of the pure stands.
Abstract: SUMMARY Two mathematical models are presented which describe progress of disease, caused by an unspecialised pathogen, in pure and mixed stands of cereal cultivars. One is a simple, discrete model utilising the parameters infection frequency (lesions/spore) and sporulation rate (spores/lesion/event) on each cultivar. The model predicts that, in most circumstances, the amount of disease in mixtures will be equal to or less than the arithmetic mean of the component pure stands. An increase in disease is only predicted in situations where the ranking of cultivars with respect to infection frequency and sporulation rate is opposed. In the other model differential equations are proposed. Solutions of these equations indicate that disease amelioration can usually be expected in such mixtures, confirming the conclusions of the discrete model and that disease levels will deviate around the geometric, rather than arithmetic, mean of the pure stands. However the advantages of this model lie in wider generality and conceptual, rather than practical, utility.

75 citations



Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Reappraisal of the nature of the disease as a non-specific soil malaise is consistent with established features of the pathology of Pythium spp.
Abstract: SUMMARY Several lines of circumstantial evidence collectively indicated that poor early growth of apple (‘replant disease’) might be associated with the effects of soil-borne pythiaceous fungi. This hypothesis was supported by pathogenicity tests. All isolates tested of P. sylvaticum and certain isolates of seven other Pythium spp. significantly reduced the growth of apple seedlings. The growth reductions caused by certain Pythium isolates were of comparable magnitude to the growth increases occurring after chloropicrin-fumigation of apple orchard soils. The Pythium isolates most virulent to apple were of low virulence to a clonal cherry rootstock. Reappraisal of the nature of the disease as a non-specific soil malaise is consistent with established features of the pathology of Pythium spp. The disease, however, is an ill-defined ‘poor growth phenomenon’ with no diagnostic symptoms and conclusive evidence that Pythium spp. are widely causal is likely to be elusive.

72 citations


Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Application of aqueous suspensions of infective juvenile Heterorhabditis heliothidis, isolate T327, to the soil resulted in up to 100% parasitisation of larvae of the black vine weevil, Otiorhynchus sulcatus, in potted yew, raspberries and grapes in nurseries, and over 87% parasitism on potted cyclamens and strawberries.
Abstract: SUMMARY Application of aqueous suspensions of infective juvenile Heterorhabditis heliothidis, isolate T327, to the soil resulted in up to 100% parasitisation of larvae of the black vine weevil, Otiorhynchus sulcatus, in potted yew, raspberries and grapes in nurseries, and over 87% parasitisation on potted cyclamens and strawberries. Pupae and newly emerged adults on grapevines were also parasitised. Another isolate, T310, produced 92.5 to 98.5% parasitism of O. sulcatus larvae on potted cyclamens in glasshouse, but was less effective on strawberries. Neoaplectana bibionis was found to be less effective than H. heliothidis T327 strain. The use of these nematodes provides an economical and effective method for controlling O. sulcatus on potted plants in glasshouses and nurseries.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The results indicate that PCV is transmitted by a vector that is resistant to air-drying and closely associated with S. arundinaceum bait seedlings, and P. graminis is thought to be the vector of PCV.
Abstract: SUMMARY Purified preparations of particles of peanut clump virus (PCV) had A,,,/A,,, values (corrected for light scattering) of 1.00. They contained rod-shaped particles with sedimentation coefficients of 183 S and 224 S, and a density in CsCl of 1.32 g/ml. PCV infected 36 species in 8 plant families. No serological relationship was detected between PCV and barley stripe mosaic, beet necrotic yellow vein, Nicotiana velutina mosaic and tobacco mosaic viruses. PCV was seed-borne for two generations in groundnut (Arachis hypogaea) but was not seed-borne in great millet (Sorghum arundinaceum), Phaseolus mungo or Nicotiana benthamiana. Seedlings of groundnut, great millet and wheat (Triticum aestivum) became infected when grown in soil from groundnut fields with outbreaks of clump ,disease, and the infectivity of soil survived air-drying at 25 "C for 3 months. Groundnut seedlings became infected when grown in sterilised soil contaminated with washed roots of naturally-infected S. arundinaceum but not in soil to which roots of naturally infected groundnut or shoots of infected groundnut were added, or in which mechanically inoculated groundnut seedlings were grown at the same time. The patchy distribution of PCV in a crop was related to the infectivity of the soil for groundnut and to the presence of Polymyxa graminis resting spores which could be detected in the roots of S. arundinaceum bait seedlings, but not in those of groundnut. The results indicate that PCV is transmitted by a vector that is resistant to air-drying and closely associated with S. arundinaceum roots. For these reasons P. graminis is thought to be the vector of PCV.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: A nematode parasitic on prepupae of larch sawfly (Cephalcia lariciphila) appears to be indistinguishable from Neoaplectana carpocapsae, and it is suggested that the nematodes could be used to supplement biological control of Cephalia lar anticiphila.
Abstract: SUMMARY A nematode parasitic on prepupae of larch sawfly (Cephalcia lariciphila) appears to be indistinguishable from Neoaplectana carpocapsae. Of three temperatures tested the optimum for development was 25 °C at which most eggs were produced in both the first and second generations. Infective nematodes entered sawfly prepupae through the anus and mouth, but the preferred mode of entry was through the spiracles; prepupal hosts were extremely attractive to infective nematodes. Nematodes overwintered in prepupal hosts and in the soil. Dauerlarvae penetrated 10 cm of packed moist soil to infect prepupae constrained at the bottom of a vertical tube, sawfly mortality decreasing with depth. Dauerlarvae may also migrate 8 cm horizontally, and 5 cm upwards, to invade the host. It is suggested that the nematode could be used to supplement biological control of Cephalcia lariciphila.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The numbers of seedlings were greatest in the first year and thereafter decreased approximately exponentially from year to year, except for C. segetum and A. cotula, in which there was evidence of innate dormancy imposed by the seed coat.
Abstract: SUMMARY Achenes of 12 species of Compositae were collected in each of 3 years and mixed with the top 7.5 cm of sterilised soil which was confined in cylinders sunk in the ground outdoors and cultivated three times yearly. Seedling emergence was recorded for 5 yr and the numbers of viable seeds remaining then determined. Emergence of Arctium lappa, A. minus, Picris hieracioides, Taraxacum officinale, Sonchus arvensis and S. asper was mainly in spring. Seedlings of Chrysanthemum segetum, Lapsana communis, Anthemis cotula and Sonchus oleraceus were often most numerous in spring but also emerged at other times, while Matricaria matricarioides and M. recutita showed no consistent seasonal pattern of emergence. Except for C. segetum and A. cotula, in which there was evidence of innate dormancy imposed by the seed coat, the numbers of seedlings were greatest in the first year and thereafter decreased approximately exponentially from year to year. Few viable seeds of A. lappa or A. minus remained after 5 yr and those of T. officinale, P. hieracioides and S. arvensis accounted for less than 1.5% of the seeds sown. Seed survival was greatest in the annual weeds and ranged from 2.1% (S. asper) to 8.6% (M. matricarioides) after 5 yr.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Fuctuations in the incidence and amount of post-bloom fruit drop disease of citrus caused by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides in Belize prevent economic disease control.
Abstract: SUMMARY Fluctuations in the incidence and amount of post-bloom fruit drop disease of citrus caused by Colletotrichum gloeosporioides in Belize prevent economic disease control. During the cooler drier months of the year when blossom infection is common there are variations in the incidence of rainfall and associated climatic parameters, and in the pattern of flowering. Large amounts of disease develop when periods of rain followed by prolonged wetness occur during peak blossoming periods. Blossoms are most susceptible during the open flower stage and infection of terminal flowers invariably results in infection of all other flowers on the spike. Disease incidence is greater in the lower parts of the trees, but flowering is greater in the upper regions. Large numbers of Colletotrichum spores are produced during wet conditions from apparently healthy leaves and from diseased flowers, but these rapidly lose viability when dried. Few spores are produced from old persistent calices (buttons). Although spores from leaves were a less potent inoculum source than those from flowers, they could provide the initial inoculum to commence flower infection when blossoming starts.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Field-caged and open-plot populations of the aphid Sitobion avenae on winter wheat were sampled approximately twice-weekly in the summer of 1978 and infestation affected the breadmaking quality of the grain.
Abstract: SUMMARY Field-caged and open-plot populations of the aphid Sitobion avenae on winter wheat (cv. Maris Widgeon) were sampled approximately twice-weekly in the summer of 1978. Cage populations began at growth stage 10.2 (Feekes scale) (Zadoks, G. S. 52); they were removed by spraying with pirimicarb at growth stages 10.54 (71), 11.1–11.2 (77) and 11.2–11.3 (85) respectively. All cage populations reduced mean weight per grain but the effect per aphid unit was lowest in the population of longest duration. Although the aphid index in the open plots was higher than that in the early cage treatment, yield was unaffected. Cage infestations affected the breadmaking quality of the grain: percentage flour extraction was reduced and there was an increase in colour, nicotinic acid content and thiamine (vitamin B1) content of the flour; percentage nitrogen in the flour was unaffected but there was a reduction in baking value and in the high molecular weight glutenin content; infestation also reduced α-amylase activity. Different aspects of grain quality did not change in parallel with one another or with yield changes and thus damage thresholds will vary according to the yield/quality measure under consideration.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The concentrations of cucumber mosaic (CMV) and alfalfa mosaic viruses, present in various types of cultured plant tissues, were significantly less when ribavirin (syn. Virazole) at 50 or 100 mg/litre was present in the culture medium.
Abstract: SUMMARY The concentrations of cucumber mosaic (CMV) and alfalfa mosaic viruses, present in various types of cultured plant tissues, were significantly less when ribavirin (syn. Virazole) at 50 or 100 mg/litre was present in the culture medium. CMV concentrations decreased within 24 days in infected cultures treated with ribabirin, but incubation periods of up to 127 days were required before the virus was undetectable. However, virus-free cultures were obtained from CMV-infected meristem-tips irrespective of the presence or absence of ribavirin. Kinetin at concentrations up to 25.6 mg/litre had no persistent antiviral effect.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Analysis of antiserum/virus reactions by density gradient centrifugation showed that CRLV is distantly related to all luteoviruses tested; its relationships were closest to barley yellow dwarf virus (RPV strain), and perhaps also to beet western yellows virus, more distant to tobacco necrotic dwarf, potato leafroll and bean leafroll viruses, and very distant to barleyyellow dwarf (MAV strain) and soybean dwarf viruses.
Abstract: SUMMARY Carrot red leaf virus (CRLV) was purified from infected chervil by centrifuging whole plant extracts at low speed and incubating the resuspended pellets with Driselase; the digest was then treated with 1% (v/v) Triton X-100 and the virus concentrated by centrifugation twice at high speed through a layer of 20% sucrose. The preparations (about 1 μg virus/g tissue) contained isometric particles c. 25 nm in diameter which formed a single u.v.-absorbing component in sucrose density gradients. Chervil seedlings exposed to aphids (Cavariella aegopodii) that had been injected with or had fed on fractions from the u.v.-absorbing zone developed typical symptoms of infection with CRLV. CRLV particles had a sedimentation coefficient (s20,w) of 104 S, buoyant density in CsCl of 1.403 g/cm3 and A260/A280 of 1.62. Antiserum with a gel-diffusion titre of 1/512 was obtained from a rabbit injected intradermally with 100 μg purified virus. CRLV was detected by immunosorbent electron microscopy and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay in extracts of the petioles and leaf midribs of infected chervil and in groups of five to 20 viruliferous C. aegopodii. Analysis of antiserum/virus reactions by density gradient centrifugation showed that CRLV is distantly related to all luteoviruses tested; its relationships were closest to barley yellow dwarf virus (RPV strain), and perhaps also to beet western yellows virus, more distant to tobacco necrotic dwarf, potato leafroll and bean leafroll viruses, and very distant to barley yellow dwarf (MAV strain) and soybean dwarf viruses. Some of these relationships were detected by double diffusion in agarose gels and by electron microscopy of antiserum/virus mixtures. Immunosorbent electron microscopy detected all these relationships but suggested that CRLV was more closely related to tobacco necrotic dwarf and potato leafroll viruses than to barley yellow dwarf virus (RPV strain). The results show that CRLV should be considered a definitive member of the luteovirus group, and provide confirmation of recent evidence that potato leafroll virus is a luteovirus.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Losses during conservation and utilisation can be reduced by minimising the period of field drying and using chemical additives to improve preservation or digestibility.
Abstract: SUMMARY Losses occur during the conservation of forage crops as a result of plant respiration post-cutting and post-harvest; as a result of fermentation, surface deterioration, and (in the case of wet crops) effluent production whilst in store. Further losses occur when conserved forages are given to ruminants; the largest being that of undigested material voided in faeces. Losses during conservation and utilisation can be reduced by minimising the period of field drying and using chemical additives to improve preservation or digestibility.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The complete correlation between sunblotch disease and the presence of viroid indicates that the complementary DNA hybridisation assay procedure can be used for the indexing of sunblOTch disease.
Abstract: SUMMARY A routine procedure has been established for the sensitive and specific detection of avocado sunblotch viroid in partially purified nucleic acid extracts of avocado leaves by hybridisation analysis with 32P-complementary DNA prepared against the purified viroid. Avocado sunblotch viroid was shown to be present in 12 avocado trees that had indexed positive in a biological test for sunblotch disease but was absent from 10 trees that indexed negative. The complete correlation between sunblotch disease and the presence of viroid indicates that the complementary DNA hybridisation assay procedure can be used for the indexing of sunblotch disease. The overall procedure of leaf extraction and hybridisation analysis can be completed in 5 days and is to be compared with up to 2 yr required for indexing by biological methods. The level of avocado sunblotch viroid in partially purified nucleic acid extracts of a number of different sources of sunblotch infected avocado leaves was found to vary 10 000-fold from 0.2% to 2 × 10-5% by weight. The lower limit of detectability of the viroid by the hybridisation assay is considered to be about 10-5% by weight; this is at least 103 times more sensitive than the detection of the viroid by polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis of the leaf nucleic acid extracts followed by staining.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It may be postulated from the data that retranslocation of stored photosynthate, produced before anthesis, plays an important role in grain filling and that mildew post anthesis may have little effect on yield.
Abstract: SUMMARY Barley plants (cv. Julia), grown in a greenhouse in large boxes of John Innes compost at a spacing equivalent to 300 plants/m2, were exposed to powdery mildew from growth stage (G.S.) 2 (Feekes scale) until maturity. Treatment with ethirimol was used to provide five different epidemic patterns, viz. (i) no mildew, (ii) early mildew, (iii) late mildew, (iv) continuous mildew and (v) continuous mildew but delayed by seed dressing. None of the treatments affected the number of spikelet primordia differentiated on primary shoots, nor were the numbers and sizes of leaves affected. From graphs of mildew and green leaf area (GLA), plotted from G.S. 2 to G.S. 10.5, areas under the curves were determined. There was a strong negative correlation (r= -0.926) between areas under the mildew and GLA curves and it was also clear that reduction in GLA lagged behind disease. Grain yield was strongly correlated with total area under the GLA curve (r= 0.994 for primary shoots and 0.986 for tillers). For values of GLA at specific growth stages the best correlations were found at G.S. 9 (r= 0.967 for primary shoots and 0.992 for tillers). The correlation between total yield of primary shoots and area under the mildew curve was also high (r= 0.953) but for mildew estimates at specific times only those at G.S. 7 were significant (r= 0.980); at G.S. 10.5 there was no significant correlation. It may be postulated from the data that retranslocation of stored photosynthate, produced before anthesis, plays an important role in grain filling and that mildew post anthesis may have little effect on yield. The implications of the results are discussed in relation to methods of loss appraisal and strategies for mildew control.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: It was concluded that the first primary tiller could be regarded as an independent assimilatory unit when it reached a dry weight of about 25 mg even though some import of main shoot assimilate continued until the tiller was double this weight.
Abstract: The patterns of growth, assimilation of 14CO2 and distribution of 14C-labelled assimilate were followed for 12 wk from sowing in individual plants of Lolium perenne grown in miniswards at either low (500 plants m-2) or high (5000 plants m-2) density. At the latter density, plants were characterised by a 50% reduction in RGR, by the production of fewer tillers, especially second- and third-order tillers, and by a reduction in mean tiller weight. All the green and senescing leaves of each tiller assimilated 14CO2 and the overall assimilatory capacity of a tiller was directly related to its dry weight. At both densities the plant consisted of a main shoot and established tillers with comparable assimilatory activities and a range of developing tillers that assimilated relatively small amounts of 14CO2. As each successive primary tiller developed it was supplied with assimilate from the main shoot and the degree of support was inversely proportional to the dry weight of the tiller. At both densities it was concluded that the first primary tiller could be regarded as an independent assimilatory unit when it reached a dry weight of about 25 mg even though some import of main shoot assimilate continued until the tiller was double this weight. The supply of assimilate to the root system was greatly reduced at both densities compared with previous observations on plants grown singly.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Fundatrices and oviparae in addition to having an intrinsic preference for bird cherry over other plants did better on particular growth stages of their primary host.
Abstract: SUMMARY Fundatrices died when caged on senescent leaves of bird cherry on which oviparae thrived. Fundatrigeniae had more ovarioles and a higher reproductive rate than fundatrices. Oviparae developed and matured eggs on unfurling leaves but they took longer to reach maturity and grew more slowly than when reared on senescent leaves. Fundatrices and oviparae in addition to having an intrinsic preference for bird cherry over other plants did better on particular growth stages of their primary host.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The presence of CLV in relation to the etiology of cassava mosaic thus remains unresolved.
Abstract: SUMMARY A strain of cassava latent geminivirus (CLV) was isolated from mosaic-affected cassava plants from coastal districts of Kenya. This virus (CLV-C) did not infect Nicotiana clevelandii, a diagnostic host of the type strain (CLV-T); experimental host range was very restricted and CLV-C only infected N. benthamiana and N. rustica out of several solanaceous hosts readily infected by CLV-T. CLV-C was also isolated from naturally infected Jatropha multifida (Euphorbiaceae) and Hewittia sublobata (Convolvulaceae). CLV-C was propagated in N. benthamiana with difficulty and only those isolates derived from cassava plants infected with severe mosaic symptoms were maintained more or less successfully; these sources usually contained a higher concentration of CLV than plants with mild symptoms. Symptom variants generally remained unchanged when grafted into a highly susceptible South American cassava variety. CLV-C and CLV-T seemed to occur respectively only in coastal and western districts but their ranges overlapped in central Kenya where they could have been introduced in infected material. CLV-C could be purified satisfactorily with the method used for CLV-T but only after modifying the procedure by substituting phosphate for borate in the extraction buffer, n-butanol for n-butanol/chloroform in clarification of extracts, and phosphate for borate buffer when resuspending concentrated virus. A virus serologically indistinguishable from CLV-T was isolated from mosaic- affected material obtained from Nigeria; East African and Nigerian isolates were essentially similar in host range and symptomatology. In gel-diffusion serology tests, pronounced precipitation spurs developed between CLV-T and CLV-C indicating that the isolates were related but not identical serologically. Symptoms typical of cassava mosaic disease appeared in only three of 105 plants in experiments on transmission of CLV-C and CLV-T by whiteflies, when attempted acquisition of either clarified CLV-infective sap or purified CLV was made through ‘Parafilm’ membranes. Because it is possible that the three infections resulted from contamination, they cannot constitute proof of transmission. The presence of CLV in relation to the etiology of cassava mosaic thus remains unresolved.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: 3 formulations of metalaxyl were tested in various seed treatments for the control of pearl millet downy mildew in 3 field experiments with downy Mildew-susceptible pearl millets hybrid NHB-3 and there were no significant effects of application method.
Abstract: 3 formulations of metalaxyl were tested in various seed treatments for the control of pearl millet downy mildew (Sclerospora graminicola) in 3 field experiments with downy mildew-susceptible pearl millet hybrid NHB-3. Significant reductions in downy mildew were obtained with all fungicide treatments. Best control was obtained when seed was soaked in 0.5% aq. sol. of a liquid formulation (mean infection index of 9.8% compared with 94.8% in the untreated control). The degree of control with the wettable powder formulations was directly related to fungicide dosage and there were no significant effects of application method. Simple dusting of seed at 2 g a.i./kg gave a high level of control (infection index of 12.6% compared with 78.9% in the untreated control). In 2 experiments, grain yields from all the treated plots were significantly greater than from the untreated plots (means of 1.23 and 1.53 t/ha for treated plots compared with 485 and 743 kg, resp. ), and in the 3rd, the treatment with the least downy mildew gave significantly more grain than the untreated control (1.23 t compared with 727 kg/ha)

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Estimates of the sizes of the autumn migrations, the over-wintering egg populations, the spring fundatrigeniae and the spring migrations have been used to forecast field bean crop infestation levels which, in turn, project subsequent trap catches of alatae.
Abstract: SUMMARY Daily suction trap samples at a height of 12·2 m collected throughout the year, winter egg and ‘spring’ population counts on the spindle tree, Euonymus europaeus, and initial infestations of the black bean aphid, Aphis fabae, on field bean, Vicia faba, crops are available from Southern England since 1970. In different areas, estimates of the sizes of the autumn migrations, the over-wintering egg populations, the spring fundatrigeniae and the spring migrations, have been used to forecast field bean crop infestation levels which, in turn, project subsequent trap catches of alatae. The forecasts of crop infestation become progressively more accurate from the autumn migration to the following spring migration, accounting for 28%, 54%, 54% and 64% of the variance respectively. In areas where traps are sited, the spring migration trap samples give the most accurate estimate of the size and timing of crop infestation. Autumn trap catches are particularly useful as very early forecasts of likely very large or very small populations on field beans about 8 months later, but otherwise they lack precision. Egg sampling in winter provides a considerably more accurate forecast approximately 5 months before crop infestations. In spring (May), fundatrigeniae sampled on spindle are most useful for predicting time of migration, and provide approximately 2 weeks' warning for insecticide application, if needed. Finally, trap sampling of the spring migration provides the latest estimate of both the sizes of crop infestations and the timing of insecticide treatment. The E. europaeus and aerial sampling systems are complementary, the traps providing systematic, continuous information and the E. europaeus samples greater detail. Combined, they can provide excellent long-term fore-warning of the need for chemical control and short-term warning of control timing. Forecasts have been 90% correct in eight years out of nine. The error in the ninth year may be due to immigration from the European mainland.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: Glasshouse assessments of resistance to S. avenae in 29 entries of wheat and two of rye were made by releasing half-grown aphids on randomised plants at the stem extension phase of growth, finding no cultivar was found to be resistant to Metopolophium dirhodum.
Abstract: SUMMARY Glasshouse assessments of resistance to S. avenae in 29 entries of wheat and two of rye were made by releasing half-grown aphids on randomised plants at the stem extension phase of growth. Wheat cvs Kador, Amigo, Highbury and Lutescens 1377 were resistant and cvs Sentry and Talavera de Bellevue partially resistant. Cv. Klein Acero, a breeding line TB68/6/10 and Lerma Rojo selections 197 to 200 were highly susceptible to S. avenae although the latter are moderately resistant to greenbug (Schizaphis graminum) (Starks & Merkle, 1977). The rye cultivars were susceptible to 5. avenae and no cultivar was found to be resistant to Metopolophium dirhodum. Clonal stocks of S. avenae, differing in colour, varied in their ability to form large populations on susceptible cultivars, and hence in their differentiation of susceptible from resistant wheat. No clone was detected with specific ability to attack the resistant cvs Kador and Amigo.

Journal ArticleDOI
C. Aveling1
TL;DR: Investigation of integrated control of the damson-hop aphid Phorodon humuli on hops found a rapid decline in aphid numbers occurred in mid- to late-July, coinciding with the peak numbers of fourth and fifth instar larvae and adults, the most voracious anthocorid stages.
Abstract: SUMMARY Field studies in 1974, 1975 and 1976 investigated integrated control of the damson-hop aphid Phorodon humuli on hops. After the aphicidal effects of an early-season soil drench of mephosfolan had declined, natural enemies controlled the aphids for the remainder of the season. Anthocorid bugs, particularly Anthocoris nemoralis, were the most abundant predators. In each year a rapid decline in aphid numbers occurred in mid- to late-July, coinciding with the peak numbers of fourth and fifth instar larvae and adults, the most voracious anthocorid stages. Aphids in the cones remained under control for the rest of the season in 1974 and 1975, and increased in 1976 but damaging numbers did not develop. When predators were excluded by caging mephosfolan-treated bines, high aphid densities developed on the leaves, and the cones were heavily infested. Plants not treated with an insecticide were almost completely defoliated by late-July. Heavily infested ‘missed bines’, due to uneven uptake of mephosfolan, attracted large numbers of anthocorids, which later dispersed into the surrounding plants.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: No improvement in population growth rate was found when the less favourable host cultivars were infected with CBRSV, but both aphid species weighed less and/or had smaller nymphal populations on cultivars showing the severest symptoms.
Abstract: SUMMARY When turnip plants with 3–7 leaves were inoculated with cabbage black ringspot virus (CBRSV) on the 3rd rough-leaf, symptoms only appeared on leaves that had been less than 15 mm long at the time of inoculation, although infection decreased the area and both fresh and dry weight of all leaves. Leaves were ‘aged’ by their appearance and placed in Leaf Age Categories (LACs). Leaves with symptoms senesced (‘aged’) prematurely. CBRSV-infection of cv. Green Top White did not change the distribution of populations of Myzus persicae between LACs, but increased the proportion of the plant suitable for colonisation. All suitable LACs were quickly colonised by adult apterae and nymphs. On CBRSV-infected plants the nymphal period was shorter, F1 adults deposited larvae more frequently and the live body weight and tibial length of the F2 generation was greater, than on healthy plants. The distribution of Brevicoryne brassicae populations on cv. Green Top White differed from that of M. persicae but was also unchanged by CBRSV-infection. On healthy plants the largest colonies were on mature leaves, so that on virus-infected plants premature senescence shortened the life of the colony. On CBRSV-infected plants the nymphal period was prolonged and the live weight of F1 and F2 adult apterae was less than on healthy plants. The differences between the biology of M. persicae and B. brassicae on CBRSV-infected cv. Green Top White were associated with the accelerated senescence of CBRSV-infected leaves. The possibility that CBRSV-infection might reduce the resistance of turnips to aphid infestation was tested. M. persicae and B. brassicae were cultured on two favourable and two less favourable cultivars. No improvement in population growth rate was found when the less favourable host cultivars were infected with CBRSV, but both aphid species weighed less and/or had smaller nymphal populations on cultivars showing the severest symptoms. These results are discussed in relation to the evolution of non-persistent virus transmission by aphids.

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The occurrence of galls on roots showed that nematodes fed both on source and on bait plants in all experiments and, in some experiments, CLRV was detected by direct assays of Longidorus elongatus, L. leptocephalus and Paralongidorus maximus.
Abstract: SUMMARY The ability of 10 nematode species to transmit three strains of cherry leaf roll virus (CLRV) was tested by three methods: (1) virus-infected source plants and virus-free bait plants were grown concurrently in nematode-infested soil, (2) as for (1) but virus source plants were removed before bait plants were planted, and (3) nematodes were extracted from soil after access to virus source plants, and were added to pots containing bait plants. The occurrence of galls on roots showed that nematodes fed both on source and on bait plants in all experiments and, in some experiments, CLRV was detected by direct assays (slash tests) of Longidorus elongatus, L. leptocephalus and Paralongidorus maximus. Although the nematodes readily transmitted control viruses, for which they are known to be vectors, CLRV was detected by root assays in only a few bait plants exposed to L. elongatus, L. macrosoma, Xiphinema diversicaudatum or L. leptocephalus + X. vuittenezi in tests by method 1. The recovery of CLRV in these tests is interpreted as being due to contamination. These results add to the increasing circumstantial evidence against the involvement of nematodes in the transmission of CLRV. Other possible mechanisms of spread are discussed.