A virus of legumes causing a disease described as "little leaf" has infected with differing degrees of severity some 40 per cent. of pasture legumes in experimental plots in subtropical Queensland. The symptoms are similar to those caused by the "big bud-witches' broom" complex of viruses of which it is probably another strain. Transmission studies have shown that the vector is the leafhopper Orosius argentatus (Evans) which also transmits tomato "big bud", lucerne "witches' broom", potato "purple top wilt", and tobacco "yellow dwar"' diseases. The O. argentatus taken direct from the field in Queensland, and its progeny reared in the laboratory, were efficient vectors of "little leaf" whereas the Canberra strain bred in the laboratory would not transmit 'little leaf' and was not an efficient vector of the other "yellows" viruses. The majority of species and strains tested in the genera Crotalaria, Desmodium, Indigofera, and Stylosanthes are susceptible to "little leaf". Within such genera there are a few resistant species or strains with promising agronomic characters. Lucerne and white clover are relatively resistant to "little leaf". The genera Arachis, Centrosema, Doliehos, Glycine, Lespedeza, Leucaena, Pueraria, Phaseolus, Vigna, and Zornia contain species and strains with marked field resistance. Most of the species and strains considered to be promising pasture legumes possess field resistance to "little leaf".
SUMMARYThe causal agent of Chloris striate mosaic disease appears to be a virus with polyhedral particles 18 nm in diameter usually occurring as paired structures about 18 times 30 nm in negatively stained preparations. These particles were detected in the nuclei of infected plants forming characteristic inclusions in all cells except those of the epidermis. Such particles were not detected in thin sections of viruliferous leaf hopper vectors (Nesoclutha pallida). Purified virus preparations were shown to be highly infective when assayed by feeding vector leaf hoppers through membranes and confining them on indicator plants.In particle morphology, chloris striate mosaic virus (CSMV) differs from other viruses of Gramineae in Australia but resembles maize streak virus isolated in Africa, which however is serologically unrelated.
A study has been made of a recently recognized virus disease, subterranean clover stunt. Field observations of its occurrence, distribution, and symptoms, and experimental data on insect transmission are recorded. Attempts to transmit the disease by mechanical means and by leafhoppers were unsuccessful. It was transmitted by two species of aphids, efficiently by Aphis craccivora Koch and less efficiently by Myzus persicae (Sulz.), but not by four other species of aphids tested. The virus was transmitted to a series of indicator plants by aphids and, since it carried over a moult of A. cruccivora, it belongs to the "persistent" type. The host range covers a wide variety of legumes, including some subtropical species. The means by which the disease is carried over from season to season was not determined but the virus probably persists in summer-growing annual and perennial legumes.
SUMMARYA virus causing maize wallaby ear disease was transmitted experimentally by Cicadulina bimaculata to fourteen species of monocotyledonous plants. It was also transmitted by Nesoclutha pallida, and by grafting. The symptoms obtained resemble closely those reported for maize leaf gall disease in the Philippines and maize rough dwarf virus in Italy and Israel.About 85% of C. bimaculata caught in the field carried maize wallaby ear virus (MWEV), and many of their progeny were viruliferous even when not allowed access to infected plants. The proportion of infective individuals in clones bred for nine generations from selected non‐transmitting adults decreased from 85% in the first nymphs to less than 1%; such individuals were difficult to rear, as their fecundity and longevity decreased greatly. N. pallida transmitted MWEV after injection with partially purified extracts of infected plants.Spherical particles c. 85 nm in diameter were found in the salivary glands of viruliferous C. bimaculata, but not in those of non‐transmitting individuals. The particles occurred in tubules in the cytoplasm and each had a densely stained core c. 50 nm in diameter. Particles similar in size to the core were found in extracts of infected but not uninfected maize, and in extracts of viruliferous but not in non‐viruliferous C. bimaculata and N. pallida.
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