Department of Plant Pathology, The University of Georgia, Tifton Campus, 2360 Rainwater Road, Tifton, GA 31793-5766, USA.
Virus Res. 2011 Aug;159(2):101-9. doi: 10.1016/j.virusres.2011.04.014. Epub 2011 Apr 28.
Spotted wilt disease of peanut (Arachis hypogaea) (SWP), caused by Tomato spotted wilt virus (TSWV) (genus Tospovirus, family Bunyaviridae), was first observed in Alabama, Florida, and Georgia in the late 1980s and rapidly became a major limiting factor for peanut production in the region. Tobacco thrips (Frankliniella fusca) and western flower thrips (Frankliniella occidentalis) both occur on peanut throughout the southeastern U.S., but F. fusca is the predominant species that reproduces on peanut, and is considered to be the more important vector. Several non-crop sources of potential primary vectors and TSWV inoculum have been identified, but their relative importance has not been determined. The peanut growing season in Alabama, Florida, and Georgia is from April through November, and 'volunteer' peanut plants can be present for much of the remainder of the year. Therefore peanut itself has huge potential for perpetuating both vector and virus. Symptoms are often evident within a few days of seedling emergence, and disease progress is often rapid within the first 50-60 days after planting. Based on destructive sampling and assays for TSWV, there is often a high incidence of asymptomatic infections even in peanut genotypes that produce few and mild symptoms of infection in the field. Severity of SWP epidemics fluctuates significantly from year to year. The variability has not been fully explained, but lower incidences have been associated with years categorized as "La Niña" in the El Niño-Southern Oscillation. Planting date can have a large effect on disease incidence within a location. This may be linked to the thrips reproductive cycle and environmental effects on the plant and plant-thrips-virus interactions. Row pattern, plant population, and in-furrow applications of phorate insecticide can also affect epidemics of SWP. Considerable progress has been made in developing cultivars with natural field resistance to TSWV. Use of cultivars with moderate field resistance combined with other suppressive measures has been very successful for managing spotted wilt disease. Several new cultivars with higher levels of field resistance can improve control and allow more flexibility in the integrated management programme. Although effects of these factors on epidemics of SWP have been documented, mechanisms responsible for disease suppression by most factors have not been fully elucidated.
花生斑点萎蔫病(SWP)由番茄斑萎病毒(TSWV)(属 Tospovirus, Bunyaviridae 科)引起,于 20 世纪 80 年代末在阿拉巴马州、佛罗里达州和佐治亚州首次发现,并迅速成为该地区花生生产的主要限制因素。烟草蓟马(Frankliniella fusca)和西部花蓟马(Frankliniella occidentalis)均在整个美国东南部的花生上发生,但 F. fusca 是在花生上繁殖的主要物种,被认为是更重要的传播者。已确定了几种非作物来源的潜在主要传播者和 TSWV 接种体,但它们的相对重要性尚未确定。阿拉巴马州、佛罗里达州和佐治亚州的花生种植季节为 4 月至 11 月,而“自生”花生植株在一年中的大部分时间都可能存在。因此,花生本身具有传播者和病毒持续存在的巨大潜力。在幼苗出土后的几天内,症状通常很明显,在种植后 50-60 天内,疾病的进展通常很快。基于破坏性采样和 TSWV 检测,即使在田间产生少量和轻度感染症状的花生基因型中,也常常存在高比例的无症状感染。SWP 流行的严重程度每年波动很大。这种可变性尚未得到充分解释,但与厄尔尼诺-南方涛动中的“拉尼娜”年份相关的发病率较低。种植日期对同一地点的发病率有很大影响。这可能与蓟马的繁殖周期以及环境对植物和植物-蓟马-病毒相互作用的影响有关。行模式、种植密度和沟施磷虫脒杀虫剂也会影响 SWP 流行。在开发对 TSWV 具有天然田间抗性的品种方面取得了相当大的进展。使用具有中度田间抗性的品种结合其他抑制措施,对管理斑点萎蔫病非常成功。一些具有更高田间抗性的新型品种可以改善控制效果,并为综合管理计划提供更大的灵活性。虽然已经记录了这些因素对 SWP 流行的影响,但大多数因素对疾病抑制的机制尚未完全阐明。