Unusual outbreaks of curly top disease in processing tomato fields in northern California in 2021 and 2022 were caused by a rare strain of beet curly top virus and facilitated by extreme weather events.

Academic Article

Abstract

  • In the western United States, curly top disease (CTD) is caused by beet curly top virus (BCTV). In California, CTD causes economic loss to processing tomato production in central and southern areas but, historically, not in the north. Here, we document unusual CTD outbreaks in processing tomato fields in the northern production area in 2021 and 2022, and show that these were caused by the rare spinach curly top strain (BCTV-SpCT). These outbreaks were associated with proximity of fields to foothills and unusually hot, dry, and windy spring weather conditions, possibly by altering migrations of the beet leafhopper (BLH) vector from locations with BCTV-SpCT reservoirs. Support for this hypothesis came from the failure to observe CTD outbreaks and BLH migrations in 2023, when spring weather conditions were cool and wet. Our results show the climate-induced emergence of a rare plant virus strain to cause an economically important disease in a new crop and location.
  • Authors

  • Melgarejo, Tomas A
  • Cespedes, Margaret K
  • Chen, Li-Fang
  • Turini, Thomas
  • Lazicki, Patricia A
  • Vinchesi-Vahl, Amber
  • Gilbertson, Robert L
  • Status

    Publication Date

  • March 2024
  • Published In

  • Virology  Journal
  • Keywords

  • Animals
  • Beet leafhopper (Circulifer tenellus)
  • Beta vulgaris
  • California
  • Climate-induced plant disease
  • Curtovirus
  • Disease Outbreaks
  • Emerging plant viruses
  • Extreme Weather
  • Geminiviridae
  • Geminivirus
  • Hemiptera
  • Insect vectors of plant viruses
  • Solanum lycopersicum
  • Spinach curly top strain of BCTV
  • Virus-vector migration
  • Digital Object Identifier (doi)

    Pubmed Id

  • 38211381
  • Start Page

  • 109981
  • Volume

  • 591