Parry's disease of pears is similar to pear decline and is associated with mycoplasma‐like organisms transmitted by Cacopsylla pyricola
- 5 April 1992
- journal article
- Published by Wiley in Plant Pathology
- Vol. 41 (2) , 195-203
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1365-3059.1992.tb02338.x
Abstract
Mycoplasma‐like organisms (MLOs) were detected by fluorescence microscopy in a number of pear cultivars and pear seedlings growing under a range of different conditions. In the cultivar Conference, MLOs were consistently associated with symptoms of Parry's disease, a decline‐like disease of young trees with quince rootstocks. MLO‐free pear seedlings rapidly became infected when they were planted outside. Experimental transmission of MLOs to pear seedlings and Conference trees was achieved using pear psyllids, caught outside or raised on infected plants under controlled conditions. Conference trees in an orchard trial remained free from the severe spring symptoms of Parry's disease when they were protected from feeding insects during spring of the previous year. MLOs were graft transmissible, but were not perpetuated by the standard propagation practices of budding or grafting when quince rootstocks were used. Parry's disease appears to be similar to pear decline, an MLO‐induced disease well established in several other parts of the world. It is suggested that Parry's disease should be referred to as pear decline.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Control of the pear psyllid, Cacopsylla pyricola, in South East England by predators and pesticidesPublished by Elsevier ,2003
- Condition of the Phloem and the Persistence of Mycoplasmalike Organisms Associated with Apple Proliferation and Pear DeclinePhytopathology®, 1982
- Indicator Hosts for Pear Decline: Symptomatology, Histopathology, and Distribution of Mycoplasmalike Organisms in Leaf VeinsPhytopathology®, 1977
- INVESTIGATIONS TO DEMONSTRATE MYCOPLASMALIKE ORGANISMS IN DISEASED PLANTS BY FLUORESCENCE MICROSCOPYActa Horticulturae, 1976
- Effects of Trunk and Rootstock on Decline, Growth and Performance of Pear1Journal of the American Society for Horticultural Science, 1971
- Mycoplasma-like bodies in the pear psylla vector of pear declineVirology, 1971
- Mycoplasmalike Bodies in Sieve Tubes of Pear Trees Affected with Pear DeclinePhytopathology®, 1970
- Mycoplasma- or PLT Group-like Microorganisms Found in the Phloem Elements of Plants Infected with Mulberry Dwarf, Potato Witches' Broom, Aster Yellows, or Paulownia Witches' BroomJapanese Journal of Phytopathology, 1967