Transmission and Some Properties of Rice Gall Dwarf Virus

Tropical agriculture research series : proceedings of a symposium on tropical agriculture researches
ISSN 03889386
NII recode ID (NCID) AA00870529
Full text
Rice gall dwarf disease was observed for the first time in 1979 in Thailand. The symptoms consisted of stunting of rice plants, galls along veins of leaves and sheaths, reduced number of tillers, and retardation of plant growth. The disease which was transmitted bv Recilia dorsalis,Nephotettix nigropictus, Nephotettix cincticeps, Nephotettix malayanus and Nephotettix virescens in a persistent manner, was also transmitted through the eggs of N. nigropictus. Incubation period of the virus in R. dorsalis and N. nigropictus was about one week in Thailand and that in N. nigropictus was about 2 weeks at 25°C in Japan. Transmission efficiency showed marked differences among insect vector species and colonies. Of the plants inoculated, the following were infected and back-inoculated to rice: Oryza rufipogon, Hordeum vulgare, Triticum aestivum, Secale cereale, Avena saliva, Lolium multiflorum, and Alopecurus aequalis var. amurensis. No seed transmission through rice plants was detected. Double-shelled polyhedral particles about 65 nm in diameter were purified from infected rice plants and the purified particles were highly infectious to rice seedlings inoculated via insect nymphs. No specific reaction was detected between the new virus and antisera against the rive dwarf and wound tumor viruses that belong to the phytoreovirus group.
Date of issued
Creator Tadashi Morinaka
Publisher Japan International Research Center for Agricultural Sciences
Volume 19
spage 154
epage 159
Language eng

Related Publication