ISHS


Acta
Horticulturae
Home


Login
Logout
Status


Help

ISHS Home

ISHS Contact

Consultation
statistics
index


Search
 
ISHS Acta Horticulturae 432: IX International Symposium on Virus Diseases of Ornamental Plants

CONTROL OF VIRUS DISEASES IN VEGETATIVELY PROPAGATED ORNAMENTAL CROPS

Author:   S. Spiegel
Abstract:
The production of ornamental crops has increased considerably during the last decade and developed into a major economic component of advanced agriculture in many countries. Domestic and international trade in ornamentals, both as finished products (e.g. cut flowers, foliage plants, potted flowering pots) and propagation material (e.g. cuttings, bulbs, corms) are expanding constantly. The growing demand for high quality and disease-free planting material, the high sanitary standards imposed by many countries for importation of plant material, and the increasing amount of international trade, have highlighted the significance of virus diseases in ornamental crops.

A large number of ornamental plant species, of high economical value, are propagated vegetatively through cuttings, tubers, bulbs, corms etc. Production of vegetatively propagated plant material is based on building up stocks from source plants. Viruses usually enter a propagation system at the breeding or germplasm level and are transmitted vertically down the propagation chain. The ultimate outcome of this process is virus-infected progeny. In many cases, virus and virus-like agents are symptomless in their hosts. Plants infected with a single virus tend to acquire a complex of viruses which results in severe distortion of entire plants or plant parts e.g. flowers.

Since no practical treatments to cure virus-infected plants in the field are available, elimination of viruses from propagation material is currently the method used to obtain virus-free material. For convenience, the term 'viruses' will be used here to include virus-like agents, viroids and mycoplasma-like bodies (MLOs).

Download Adobe Acrobat Reader (free software to read PDF files)

432_19     432     432_21

URL www.actahort.org      Hosted by K.U.Leuven      © ISHS