Literature DB >> 30786390

Insect Vectors (Hemiptera: Cixiidae) and Pathogens Associated with the Disease Syndrome "Basses Richesses" of Sugar Beet in France.

Alberto Bressan1, Olivier Sémétey1, Benoit Nusillard2, Denis Clair1, Elisabeth Boudon-Padieu1.   

Abstract

The syndrome "basses richesses" (SBR) is a disease of sugar beet in eastern France associated with two phloem-restricted, nonculturable plant pathogens: a stolbur phytoplasma and a γ-3 proteobacterium, here called SBR bacterium. Three planthopper (Hemiptera: Cixiidae) species were found to live near and within sugar beet fields in eastern France: Cixius wagneri, Hyalesthes obsoletus, and Pentastiridius leporinus. The role of these planthoppers in spreading the two pathogens to sugar beet was studied. Based on its abundance and high frequency of infection with the SBR bacterium, P. leporinus was considered to be the economic vector of SBR disease. C. wagneri, the primary vector of 'Candidatus Phlomobacter fragariae' to strawberry in western France, also was found to be infected by the SBR bacterium and to transmit the pathogen to sugar beet. Neither C. wagneri nor P. leporinus were infected by stolbur phytoplasma. Populations of H. obsoletus living on bindweed (Convolvulus arvensis) and nettle (Urtica dioica) collected near sugar beet fields did not carry the SBR bacterium, but were highly infected with two restriction fragment length polymorphism-differentiable stolbur phytoplasma isolates. In transmission assays, only the bindweed phytoplasma isolate was transmissible to and pathogenic on sugar beet. When compared with controls, the bindweed stolbur phytoplasma and SBR bacterium similarly reduced the biomass of sugar beet plants, but the phytoplasma caused greater reductions in taproot biomass and sugar content than the SBR bacterium.

Entities:  

Year:  2008        PMID: 30786390     DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-92-1-0113

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Plant Dis        ISSN: 0191-2917            Impact factor:   4.438


  4 in total

1.  Symptomatology, (Co)occurrence and Differential Diagnostic PCR Identification of 'Ca. Phytoplasma solani' and 'Ca. Phytoplasma convolvuli' in Field Bindweed.

Authors:  Jelena Jović; Slavica Marinković; Miljana Jakovljević; Oliver Krstić; Tatjana Cvrković; Milana Mitrović; Ivo Toševski
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2021-02-03

2.  Microbiome diversity and reproductive incompatibility induced by the prevalent endosymbiont Arsenophonus in two species of African cassava Bemisia tabaci whiteflies.

Authors:  Hajar El Hamss; Saptarshi Ghosh; M N Maruthi; Hélène Delatte; John Colvin
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2021-12-01       Impact factor: 2.912

3.  Biology and Rearing of an Emerging Sugar Beet Pest: The Planthopper Pentastiridius leporinus.

Authors:  Sarah Christin Behrmann; Natasha Witczak; Christian Lang; Manuela Schieler; Anna Dettweiler; Benno Kleinhenz; Mareike Schwind; Andreas Vilcinskas; Kwang-Zin Lee
Journal:  Insects       Date:  2022-07-21       Impact factor: 3.139

4.  Virus Yellows and Syndrome "Basses Richesses" in Western Switzerland: A Dramatic 2020 Season Calls for Urgent Control Measures.

Authors:  Mathieu Mahillon; Raphaël Groux; Floriane Bussereau; Justine Brodard; Christophe Debonneville; Sonia Demal; Isabelle Kellenberger; Madlaina Peter; Thomas Steinger; Olivier Schumpp
Journal:  Pathogens       Date:  2022-08-06
  4 in total

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