Barley Yellow Dwarf Viruses in Small Grains of Pennsylvania: Isolate Identification, Distribution, and Vector Efficiency
- 1 January 1987
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Scientific Societies in Plant Disease
- Vol. 71 (10) , 922-926
- https://doi.org/10.1094/pd-71-0922
Abstract
Barley yellow dwarf virus (BYDV) was identified in small grains collected from 1984 to 1986 from eight counties in Pennsylvania. Isolates of BYDV recovered from commercial fields in three environmentally distinct cereal management areas were compared with the four characterized New York isolates (RPV, RMV, MAV and PAV) by a combination of enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay and aphid transmission specificity. BYDV was recovered from 300 of 376 plants selected for testing on the basis of symptom expression. Sixteen percent of the BYDV-positive plants were infected by more than one isolate of BYDV. Data combined from single and mixed infections indicate that the percentages of plants, infected with isolates resembling RPV, RMV, MAV, and PAV were 19, 4, 9, and 82%, respectively. Isolates similar to SGV were not detected in this survey. Comparisons of two Rhopalosiphum padi aphid clones and five Sitobion avenae aphid clones collected in Pennsylvania with previously characterized clones of New York aphids indicated no differences in vector specificity for the four BYDV isolate types. Of the 329 R. padi and S. avenae collected from symptomless oat plants from fields in three countries, 15 were viruliferous for PAV, 1 for RPV, and 1 for MAV. Results suggest reservoirs for a variety of BYDV isolates occur throughout Pennsylvania and that future epiphytotics could occur under the appropriate environmental conditions.This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- The effect of different virus isolates on the expression of tolerance to barley yellow dwarf virus in barleyAnnals of Applied Biology, 1970