Vol. 56 No. 1 (2017)
Research Papers

Sour and duke cherry viruses in South-West Europe

Rodrigo PÉREZ-SÁNCHEZ
University of Salamanca
María Remedios MORALES-CORTS
University of Salamanca
María Ángeles GÓMEZ-SÁNCHEZ
University of Salamanca

Published 2017-05-09

Keywords

  • Prunus cerasus,
  • Prunus x gondouinii,
  • ELISA,
  • RT-PCR

How to Cite

[1]
R. PÉREZ-SÁNCHEZ, M. R. MORALES-CORTS, and M. Ángeles GÓMEZ-SÁNCHEZ, “Sour and duke cherry viruses in South-West Europe”, Phytopathol. Mediterr., vol. 56, no. 1, pp. 62–69, May 2017.

Abstract

This study investigated the phytosanitary status of sour and duke cherry genetic resources in the Iberian Peninsula, and the incidence and leaf symptoms induced by the Prunus necrotic ringspot virus (PNRSV), Prune dwarf virus (PDV) and Apple chlorotic leaf spot virus (ACLSV). Young leaf samples were taken from 204 sour and duke cherry trees belonging to ten cultivars, and were assayed by DAS-ELISA. Samples positive for any of the three viruses were also tested by RT-PCR. To associate the leaf symptoms with virus presence, 50 mature leaves from each infected tree were visually inspected during the summer. The ELISA and RT-PCR results indicated that 63% of the cherry trees were infected by at least one of these viruses. PNRSV occurred in all cultivars sampled and presented the highest infection rate (46%), followed by PDV (31%) and ACLSV (6%). Many trees, (60 to 100%), were asymptomatic while harbouring single and mixed virus infections. The leaf symptoms associated with the viruses included chlorotic and dark brown necrotic ringspots on secondary veins and interveinal regions, for PNRSV, generalized chlorosis around the midveins, for PDV, chlorotic and reddish necrotic ringspots, for ACLSV, and generalized interveinal chlorosis, for mixed PNRSV and PDVinfections.

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