1973
DOI: 10.1094/phyto-63-1470
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Line Pattern of Birch Caused by Apple Mosaic Virus

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Cited by 22 publications
(6 citation statements)
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“…This virus occurs worldwide and infects a number of woody and herbaceous plants in over 65 species in 19 families including apple, hazelnut, strawberry, apricot, black cherry, almond, red currant, raspberry, rose, birch, chestnut, and hop [4,10,14,26,28]. ApMV is transmitted by vegetative propagation of infected plant material and by mechanical inoculation [5].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This virus occurs worldwide and infects a number of woody and herbaceous plants in over 65 species in 19 families including apple, hazelnut, strawberry, apricot, black cherry, almond, red currant, raspberry, rose, birch, chestnut, and hop [4,10,14,26,28]. ApMV is transmitted by vegetative propagation of infected plant material and by mechanical inoculation [5].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Tobacco and rosaceous plants tested produced no symptoms. Reference FULTON 1952FULTON 1959 DiENER and WEAVER 1959 BERCKS and MiSCHKE 1964TREMAINEet al 1964DESEQUEIRA 1966GASPER 1973GOTTLIEB and BERBEE 1973 iKiNand…”
Section: R :;Rs Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The rose isolate from New York, ApMV-J, possesses characteristics similar to those ApMV isolates from apple (DE SEQUEIRA 1966), rose (FULTON 1967 a) and birch (GOTTLIEB and BERBEE 1973). Failures to transmit virus to species in the family Rosaceae and other woody plants are probably due to the presence of polyphenolics and o-quinones which inactivate the virus in crude extract (HAMP-TON andFULTON 1961, MINK 1965).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…As a first step, the presence of apple mosaic virus (ApMV) was investigated in the donor plant material available for propagation. The virus belongs to the genus Ilarvirus , Bromoviridae family, and is able to infect 19 different families, including Betulaceae (hazelnut) and Rosaceae (over 65 species) ( Gotlieb and Berbee, 1973 ; Wong and Horst, 1993 ; Aramburu and Rovira, 1998 ; Tzanetakis and Martin, 2005 ; Lakshmi et al, 2011 ). In some hazelnut cultivars the virus causes the reduction of both nut size and yield ( Kobylko et al, 2005 ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%