By
Allison Matthews MISSISSIPPI
STATE -- Tomato spotted wilt virus is a persistent and
growing problem for commercial tomato producers and home
gardeners, but new resistant varieties are available for
this growing season. "The
threat has grown from being a controllable problem that may
cause a low percentage of losses to a threat that could
easily wipe out a significant portion of a tomato planting,
if not cause an entire loss," Henn said. Spotted
wilt has an incredible number of hosts. Various strains of
the virus can thrive in all types of crops, ornamentals,
weeds and virtually any other plant that contracts the
virus. The spread of spotted wilt is hard to control because
it is carried by thrips, very tiny insects that can feed on
an infected plant when they are young and carry the virus
for the rest of their life. Thrips spread the virus to other
plants with each feeding. "It only
takes about 30 minutes of feeding to move the virus, so even
with a good pesticide coverage, it is quite possible that
the thrips would not be killed before they had the chance to
spread a tospovirus," Henn said. Spotted
wilt and its sister virus, impatiens necrotic spot, are
unique because of the wide range of plants they affect. In
Mississippi, spotted wilt has the greatest noticeable impact
on tomatoes and peppers, Henn said. Typical
characteristics of the virus are dark spotting on the leaves
and stems of a plant. Rings that resemble a bull's eye also
may appear on the fruit, leaves and stems. The virus usually
will not kill a plant immediately, but the plant will begin
to decline, and it may produce misshapen or bumpy
fruit. Henn
encouraged tomato growers to use resistant varieties of
tomato plants while they are available. He said these
varieties may lose their resistance within a few years
because similar plants with single gene resistance have not
shown long-term success in the past. Henn said plants lose
their resistance because the spotted wilt virus has many
strains with different genetic combinations. A plant that is
resistant to one strain of spotted wilt may become
susceptible to infection by another strain in a few
years. "Absolute
resistance would absolutely be the best strategy possible
against the virus. Unfortunately, it just hasn't been a
Resistant tomato plant varieties BHN 444 and BHN 555 by seed
company BHN Research will be available this year at the
retail level. The BHN 444 variety is a table tomato, and BHN
555 is heat tolerant to produce fruit through
August. Henn
recommended keeping garden areas cleared of weeds and other
unwanted plants that could serve as hosts to thrips. Also,
buy all garden plants from a reputable greenhouse to avoid
purchasing plants that already may be infected with a
tospovirus. Released:
March 5, 2001
Home
lawns & gardens news:
Tomato growers
gain wilt resistant variety
Alan
Henn, Extension plant pathologist at Mississippi State
University, said spotted wilt is a common strain of
tospovirus that is becoming a more costly threat to many
crops in the South and the rest of the nation.
For more information, contact: Dr. Alan Henn, (662)
325-3139
Visit: DAFVM
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Last Modified: Friday, 19-Dec-08 10:29:34
URL: http://msucares.com/news/print/lgnews/lg01/010305.htm
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