The effect of Banana streak virus on the growth and yield of dessert bananas in tropical Australia

被引:41
作者
Daniells, JW [1 ]
Geering, ADW [1 ]
Bryde, NJ [1 ]
Thomas, JE [1 ]
机构
[1] Dept Primary Ind, Queensland Hort Inst, Brisbane, Qld, Australia
关键词
Musa; Cavendish banana; BSV; Badnavirus; symptoms; ELISA; economic impact;
D O I
10.1111/j.1744-7348.2001.tb00130.x
中图分类号
S [农业科学];
学科分类号
09 ;
摘要
We have examined the effect of a strain of Banana streak virus (BSV-Cav) on the growth and yield of dessert bananas (Musa AAA group, Cavendish subgroup cv. Williams) in north Queensland, Australia. Healthy and infected plants were compared in a replicated field experiment over plant and first ratoon crops. In both crops, symptom expression followed a similar pattern, increasing to a maximum near the estimated time of bunch initiation, then decreasing in the period prior to bunch emergence. There was no evidence of plant-to-plant spread of virus, but the rate of transmission through suckers was 100%. In the plant crop, the mean bunch weights of healthy and infected plants were not significantly different. However, BSV-Cav infection resulted in an 18 day delay in harvest, causing a 6% reduction in yield per annum. In the ratoon crop, the mean bunch weight of infected plants was 7% less than that of healthy plants, and the interval between the harvest of plant and ratoon crops was delayed by 9 days, resulting in a 11% reduction in yield per annum. Also, the mean length of fruit from infected plants was 5% less than that of healthy plants, resulting in a smaller percentage of fruit in the extra large size category. We conclude that in horticulturally favourable conditions typical of the tropical Australian banana industry, the effects of BSV-Cav infection on the growth and yield of Cavendish bananas are small.
引用
收藏
页码:51 / 60
页数:10
相关论文
共 21 条
[1]   Evaluation of micropropagated plantain and banana (Musa spp.) for banana streak badnavirus incidence under field and screenhouse conditions in Nigeria [J].
Dahal, G ;
Gauhl, F ;
Pasberg-Gauhl, C ;
Hughes, JD ;
Thottappilly, G ;
Lockhart, BEL .
ANNALS OF APPLIED BIOLOGY, 1999, 134 (02) :181-191
[2]   Effect of temperature on symptom expression and reliability of banana streak badnavirus detection in naturally infected plantain and banana (Musa spp.) [J].
Dahal, G ;
Hughes, JD ;
Thottappilly, G ;
Lockhart, BEL .
PLANT DISEASE, 1998, 82 (01) :16-21
[3]   Studies on a Nigerian isolate of banana streak badnavirus: II. Effect of intraplant variation on virus accumulation and reliability of diagnosis by ELISA [J].
Dahal, G ;
Pasberg-Gauhl, C ;
Gauhl, F ;
Thottappilly, G ;
Hughes, JD .
ANNALS OF APPLIED BIOLOGY, 1998, 132 (02) :263-275
[4]  
Dahal G, 2000, PLANT PATHOL, V49, P68, DOI 10.1046/j.1365-3059.2000.00420.x
[5]  
Daniells J. T., 1999, BANANA STREAK DIS IL
[6]  
Diekmann M, 1996, FAO IPGRI TECHNICAL
[7]   Genetic diversity among Banana streak virus isolates from Australia [J].
Geering, ADW ;
McMichael, LA ;
Dietzgen, RG ;
Thomas, JE .
PHYTOPATHOLOGY, 2000, 90 (08) :921-927
[8]  
GEERING ADW, 2001, IN PRESS MOL PLANT P
[9]  
GEERING ADW, 1997, 11 BIENN C AUSTR PLA, P127
[10]   Integration of banana streak badnavirus into the Musa genome:: Molecular and cytogenetic evidence [J].
Harper, G ;
Osuji, JO ;
Heslop-Harrison, JS ;
Hull, R .
VIROLOGY, 1999, 255 (02) :207-213