Causal Agent:
Tospovirus (Watermelon silver mottle virus or WSMoV; Tomato spotted wilt virus or TSWV)
Characteristic Symptoms: | |
Symptoms may vary depending on the virus strain, variety and plant age at infection. | |
Leaves of WSMoV infected pepper plants have chlorotic flecks or ring-like pattern | |
TSWV infected pepper plants show necrotic ring spots on leaves and stem and leaf distortion. | |
Plants infected at very young age are usually stunted and unproductive. | |
Transmission and Spread: | |
The virus is transmitted in nature by thrips in a persistent (propagative) manner (vector can acquire and transmit the virus after feeding for several minutes to hours; virus replicates inside the vector). | |
Young thrips (larval stage) acquire the virus and adult thrips spread the virus from plant to plant during feeding. | |
The virus is not seed-transmitted. | |
Management and Control: | |
Use resistant varieties, if available.
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Use virus-free seedlings.
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Remove infected plants as early as virus symptoms are observed to prevent/minimize spread of the virus by thrips. | |
Remove crop debris, weeds and other sources of thrips after the cropping season.
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Plowing and harrowing may help reduce vector population in the soil.
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Control/minimize thrips population by using plastic mulch, blue sticky traps and/or use of insecticides such as spinosad (e.g. SuccessⓇ, EntrustⓇ), deltamethrin (e.g. Decis®, DecideⓇ, ScoutⓇ, Agro DeltametrinⓇ), acephate (e.g. Acetam®, BlackhawkⓇ) or dimethoate (e.g. Perfecthion®), fenitrothion (e.g. Sumithion 50Ⓡ)., profenofos (e.g. Selecron) and acephate (e.g. Acetam, Compete).
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