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Plant sciences, sustainable farming systems and food quality
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Further studies on Carrot virus Y: hosts, symptomatology, search for resistance, and tests for seed transmissibility

R. A. C. Jones A B D , L. J. Smith A , B. E. Gajda A , T. N. Smith A and L. J. Latham A C
+ Author Affiliations
- Author Affiliations

A Department of Agriculture, Locked Bag No. 4, Bentley Delivery Centre, Bentley, WA 6983, Australia.

B School of Plant Biology, Faculty of Natural and Agricultural Sciences, University of Western Australia, 35 Stirling Highway, Crawley, WA 8009, Australia.

C Current address: Horticultural Development Council, Bradbourne House, East Malling, Kent ME19 6DZ, UK.

D Corresponding author. Email: rjones@agric.wa.gov.au

Australian Journal of Agricultural Research 56(8) 859-868 https://doi.org/10.1071/AR05028
Submitted: 28 January 2005  Accepted: 6 June 2005   Published: 25 August 2005

Abstract

Carrot virus Y (CarVY) was studied to provide information on its host range and symptoms, identify any alternative natural hosts and sources of host resistance in carrot germplasm, and determine whether it is seed-borne. Twenty-two species belonging to the Apiaceae were inoculated with CarVY by viruliferous aphids in the glasshouse. Systemic infection with CarVY developed in carrot itself, 4 other Daucus species, 5 herbs, 1 naturalised weed, and 2 Australian native plants. When 7 of these host species were exposed to infection in the field, all became infected systemically. In both glasshouse and field, the types of symptoms that developed in infected plants and their severity varied widely from host to host. Following inoculation with infective sap, the virus was detected in inoculated leaves of 1 additional species in the Apiacaeae, and 2 species of Chenopodiaceae. A field survey did not reveal any alternative hosts likely to be important as CarVY infection reservoirs. When 34 accessions of wild carrot germplasm and 16 of other Daucus spp. were inoculated with infective aphids, symptom severity varied widely among accessions but no source of extreme resistance to CarVY was found. Tests on seedlings grown from seed collected from individual infected plants or field plantings (most with CarVY incidences of >92%) of cultivated carrot (34 135 seeds), wild carrot (20 978 seeds), Anethum graveolens (22 921 seeds), and 3 other host species (3304 seeds) did not detect any seed transmission of CarVY. The implications of these results for control of the virus in carrot crops, minimising the losses it causes, and avoiding its introduction to new locations are discussed.

Additional keywords: CarVY, potyvirus, aphids, root crops, herbs, weeds, virus reservoirs, germplasm, control.


Acknowledgments

We thank Rohan Prince for technical support, staff of the Medina Research station for field support, Brenda Coutts and Allan McKay for helpful discussion, Teresa Kotlinska and David Astley for supplying seed of carrot germplasm, and Dietrich Lesseman and Annette Kusterer for the ApVY diagnoses.


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