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Europaflagge
    • Crop farming
    • Environment

    Begomoviruses: what is the secret(s) of their success?

    Begomoviruses constitute an extremely successful group of emerging plant viruses transmitted by whiteflies of the Bemisia tabaci complex. Hosts include important vegetable, root, and fiber crops grown in the tropics and subtropics. Factors contributing to the ever-increasing diversity and success of begomoviruses include their predisposition to recombine their genomes, interaction with DNA satellites recruited throughout their evolution, presence of wild plants as a virus reservoir and a source of speciation, and extreme polyphagia and continuous movement of the insect vectors to temperate regions. These features as well as some controversial issues (replication in the insect vector, putative seed transmission, transmission by insects other than B. tabaci, and expansion of the host range to monocotyledonous plants) will be analyzed in this review.

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    Inhaltsbeschreibung

    Projekt

    VIRTIGATION

    EMERGING VIRAL DISEASES IN TOMATOES AND CUCURBITS: IMPLEMENTATION OF MITIGATION STRATEGIES FOR DURABLE DISEASE MANAGEMENT

    Standort
    • Europe
    • Italy
    • Spain
    Verfasser*innen
    • Elvira Fiallo Olivé
    • Jesús Navas Castillo
    Zweck
    • Dissemination
    • Communication
    • Education/Training
    Dateiformat
    Document
    Dateigröße
    370 kB
    Erstellt am
    15-02-2023
    Originalsprache
    English
    Offizielle Projekt-Webseite
    VIRTIGATION
    Lizenz
    CC BY
    Schlagworte
    • Begomoviruses
    • Bemisia tabaci
    • emergent diseases
    • plant viruses
    • recombination

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