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    Relationship between natural occurrence of banana streak badnavirus and symptom expression, relative concentration of viral antigen, and yield characteristics of some micropropagated Musa spp

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    Authors
    Dahal, G.
    Ortiz, R.
    Tenkouano, A.
    Hughes, J.
    Thottappilly, G.
    Vuylsteke, D.R.
    Lockhart, B.E.L.
    Date Issued
    2000-02
    Language
    en
    Type
    Journal Article
    Review status
    Peer Review
    ISI journal
    Accessibility
    Open Access
    Metadata
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    Citation
    Dahal, G., Ortiz, R., Tenkouano, A., Hughes, J., Thottappilly, G., Vuylsteke, D. & Lockhart, B. (2000). Relationship between natural occurrence of banana streak badnavirus and symptom expression, relative concentration of viral antigen, and yield characteristics of some micropropagated Musa spp. Plant Pathology, 49(1), 68-79.
    Permanent link to cite or share this item: https://hdl.handle.net/10568/92652
    DOI: https://doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-3059.2000.00420.x
    Abstract/Description
    Micropropagated plants of 36 Musa genotypes with diverse genetic backgrounds, including 14 tetraploid plantain (TMPx) and banana (TMBx) hybrids, were evaluated for their response to banana streak badnavirus (BSV) infection under three environments from 1995 to 1997 in Nigeria. The characteristics evaluated were the natural incidence of BSV based on symptoms and virus indexing, relative concentration of BSV antigens in leaf tissues determined by ELISA, and some growth and yield descriptors. Virus occurrence and symptom expression, as well as the relative concentration of BSV antigens, fluctuated greatly between seasons during the cropping cycle, being high during the rainy season and low or negligible during the hot dry season. The natural incidence of plants with symptoms and BSV-infected plants varied between genotypes. Incidence of BSV on most International Institute of Tropical Agriculture (IITA) TMPx hybrids and three Fundación Hondureòa de Investigación Agrìcola (FHIA) hybrids was high in the three environments, with some variation. Most landraces and some FHIA or Empresa Brasileira de Pesquisa Agropecuaria (EMBRAPA) hybrids were not BSV-infected under either environment at Onne. However, a few expressed some foliar symptoms at Ibadan and indexed BSV positive. The relative concentration of BSV antigens in leaf samples was also high in most TMPx and some FHIA hybrids, but low in most landraces. While BSV infection had no significant effect on most growth characteristics, it had a highly variable effect on bunch weight loss among the genotypes. There was no relationship between the natural incidence of BSV, concentration of viral antigen and bunch weight loss among the 11 TMPx hybrids, three FHIA hybrids and three plantain landraces. Despite the high natural BSV incidence and the high relative antigen concentration in their leaf tissue, TMPx 548-9, TMPx 2637-49, TMPx 7002-1 and FHIA 21 suffered less than 15% bunch weight loss, and TMPx 548-4 and FHIA 22 suffered no loss. These results suggest that under the conditions specified in this study, these hybrids could be tentatively classified as ‘field tolerant’ to BSV.
    AGROVOC Keywords
    banana streak badnavirus; antigens; genotypes; fhia hybrids; landraces; bananas; symptom expression; plantains; musa
    Subjects
    PLANT DISEASES; CROP HUSBANDRY; HANDLING, TRANSPORT, STORAGE AND PROTECTION OF AGRICULTURAL PRODUCTS; FOOD SECURITY; GENETIC IMPROVEMENT; BANANA; DISEASES CONTROL; LIVELIHOODS; PLANT BREEDING; FARM MANAGEMENT; PESTS OF PLANTS; PLANT GENETIC RESOURCES; PLANT HEALTH; PLANT PRODUCTION; PLANTAIN
    Countries
    Nigeria; United States; India
    Regions
    Africa; ACP; Asia; Western Africa; Northern America; Southern Asia
    Organizations Affiliated to the Authors
    International Institute of Tropical Agriculture; University of Minnesota; International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics
    Investors/sponsors
    World Bank; Common Fund for Commodities
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    • IITA Journal Articles [4999]

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