2012
DOI: 10.5197/j.2044-0588.2012.025.006
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Occurrence of the Israel strain of Tomato yellow leaf curl virus in New Caledonia and Loyalty Islands

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Cited by 4 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…One of these was to East Asia (between 1990 and 1995), preceding the first reports of TYLCV in Japan in 1996 (Kato et al, 1998;Kenyon et al, 2014), one to New Caledonia (between 1998 (Péréfarres et al, 2012) and two to Reunion Island: a TYLCV-Mld movement between 1987 and 1997, coinciding with the first report of TYLCV there in 1997; (Peterschmitt et al, 1999) and a TYLCV-IL movement between 1998 and 2005 (Delatte et al, 2007). Although we were unable to obtain TYLCV samples from France (TYLCV is presently thought to have been eradicated there), it is plausible that France was the Western Mediterranean country from which TYLCV entered Reunion Island and New Caledonia, since Reunion is a French overseas department and New Caledonia, a French territory (with both islands maintaining highly connected trade and transport links with metropolitan France).…”
Section: Considered (Summarised Inmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…One of these was to East Asia (between 1990 and 1995), preceding the first reports of TYLCV in Japan in 1996 (Kato et al, 1998;Kenyon et al, 2014), one to New Caledonia (between 1998 (Péréfarres et al, 2012) and two to Reunion Island: a TYLCV-Mld movement between 1987 and 1997, coinciding with the first report of TYLCV there in 1997; (Peterschmitt et al, 1999) and a TYLCV-IL movement between 1998 and 2005 (Delatte et al, 2007). Although we were unable to obtain TYLCV samples from France (TYLCV is presently thought to have been eradicated there), it is plausible that France was the Western Mediterranean country from which TYLCV entered Reunion Island and New Caledonia, since Reunion is a French overseas department and New Caledonia, a French territory (with both islands maintaining highly connected trade and transport links with metropolitan France).…”
Section: Considered (Summarised Inmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…TYLCD was initially recognised in the Jordan Valley, Israel, in the 1930s, but it was not until the early 1960s that TYLCV was identified Nitzany, 1960, 1966). Subsequently, the virus has spread unabated into the Mediterranean basin and into most tropical and sub-tropical regions of the world and is recognised as one of the world's most devastating pathogens of tomato (Abhary et al, 2007;Delatte et al, 2007;Delatte et al, 2005;Diaz-Pendon et al, 2010;Duffy and Holmes, 2007;Kenyon et al, 2014;Lefeuvre et al, 2010;Moriones and Navas-Castillo, 2000;Péréfarres et al, 2012;Picó et al, 1996;Polston and Anderson, 1997;Stonor et al, 2003;Van Brunschot et al, 2010).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast to southeast Asia and India, Oceania has comparatively few records of begomovirus diseases. In important crops, this is tomato yellow leaf curl virus—Israel (TYLCV-IL), which is now considered a ‘severe’ strain of the species Tomato yellow leaf curl virus which is present in Queensland [ 59 ], New Caledonia [ 60 ] and French Polynesia [ 61 ]. Also in Australia is the less damaging species Tomato leaf curl virus (ToLCV, previously tomato leaf curl virus—Australia), which has been known in the Northern Territory since 1970 and reached parts of Queensland’s Cape York Peninsula in the late 1990s [ 62 ].…”
Section: Begomovirusesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The most dangerous activity of this aphid is the transmission of phytopathogenic viruses, especially the Potato Y virus (PYV) and the Beet yellow virus (BYV). Fortunately, the Potato Aphid does not transmit the Tomato yellow leafcurl virus (TYLCV) recently detected in New Caledonia (Péréfarres et al 2012).…”
Section: Macrosiphum Euphorbiae (Thomas 1878)mentioning
confidence: 99%