Abstract

Summary.In a crop of blackcurrant (Ribes nigrum), cv. Baldwin in Eire, chlorotic mottling and ringspot symptoms in leaves on plants and severe crop loss was associated with infection with arabis mosaic nepovirus (ArMV) and the presence in the soil of its nematode vector, Xiphinema diversicaudatum. This is only the second report of ArMV damaging a crop of blackcurrant. Tomato black ring (TBRV) and raspberry ringspot nepoviruses were detected in single plants of redcurrant (R. rubrum) in England and flowering currant (R. sanguineum) in Scotland respectively; each of these infected plants showed foliar chlorotic line‐pattern symptoms. This is the first record of TBRV in redcurrant. A single blackcurrant plant in New Zealand showing symptoms typical of those described for interveinal white mosaic disease, contained alfalfa mosaic virus (AMV). When AMV particles were purified and concentrated from herbaceous test plants and mechanically inoculated to young blackcurrant plants, several became infected with AMV and most infected plants developed systemic symptoms typical of the original disease. This provides the strongest evidence to date that AMV is the causal agent of interveinal white mosaic disease.

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