Ndyetabula I L, Merumba S M, Jeremiah S C, Kasele S, Mkamilo G S, Kagimbo F M, Legg J P
Maruku Agricultural Research Institute, Bukoba, Tanzania.
Ukiriguru Agricultural Research Institute, Mwanza, Tanzania.
Plant Dis. 2016 Jul;100(7):1388-1396. doi: 10.1094/PDIS-11-15-1274-RE. Epub 2016 Apr 6.
Cassava brown streak disease (CBSD), caused by cassava brown streak viruses, is recognized as one of the most important plant disease threats to African food security. This study describes the incidence and severity of the different symptom types caused by CBSD, derived from extensive surveys in the country most severely affected by the disease: Tanzania. Total plant incidence and mean root severity of CBSD, recorded from 341 farmers' fields, were both greater in the Coast Zone (49.5% and 3.05), than in the Lake Zone (32.7% and 2.57). Overall, the differing incidences recorded declined in the following order: total plant incidence (39.1%), plant shoot incidence (33.4%), plant root incidence (19.3%), root incidence (10.5%), and unusable root incidence (5.4%). The much lower-than-anticipated loss due to the root necrosis that is characteristic of CBSD was offset by large reductions of root number in plants expressing foliar symptoms of CBSD (15.7% in the Coast Zone and 5.5% in the Lake Zone). These data suggest that the effects of CBSD on the growth of affected plants are greater than those due to root spoilage. Based on these two factors, annual losses due to CBSD in the parts of Tanzania surveyed were estimated at >860,000 t, equivalent to more than U.S.$51 million. A novel approach to using farm-derived data on the responses of the most frequently cultivated varieties to CBSD infection allowed the grouping of the varieties into four categories, based on their relative resistance or tolerance to infection. This tool should be of value to breeders in identifying and selecting for sources of resistance or tolerance in both local and exotic germplasm, and should ultimately contribute to enhancing the management of one of Africa's most damaging crop diseases.
木薯褐色条纹病(CBSD)由木薯褐色条纹病毒引起,被认为是对非洲粮食安全构成最重要威胁的植物病害之一。本研究描述了CBSD在受该病害影响最严重的国家——坦桑尼亚进行广泛调查得出的不同症状类型的发病率和严重程度。在沿海地区(49.5%和3.05),从341个农户田地记录的CBSD总植株发病率和平均根部严重程度均高于湖区(32.7%和2.57)。总体而言,记录到的不同发病率按以下顺序递减:总植株发病率(39.1%)、植株地上部分发病率(33.4%)、植株根部发病率(19.3%)、根部发病率(10.5%)和不可用根部发病率(5.4%)。CBSD特有的根部坏死造成的损失远低于预期,但表现出CBSD叶部症状的植株根部数量大幅减少(沿海地区减少15.7%,湖区减少5.5%),抵消了这一损失。这些数据表明,CBSD对受影响植株生长的影响大于根部腐烂造成的影响。基于这两个因素,在坦桑尼亚调查的地区,CBSD造成的年度损失估计超过860,000吨,相当于超过5100万美元。一种利用农场获取的关于最常种植品种对CBSD感染反应的数据的新方法,使得根据品种对感染的相对抗性或耐受性将其分为四类成为可能。该工具对于育种者识别和选择本地及外来种质中的抗性或耐受性来源应具有价值,并最终应有助于加强对非洲最具破坏性的作物病害之一的管理。