Abstract

Hemp (Cannabis sativa) acreage in Oregon has increased by approximately 240 times in the last 5 years, and a greater number of hemp diseases have been observed. This special report documents pathogens, particularly those causing virus and virus-like diseases, that have been detected from field and greenhouse-grown hemp crops in Oregon, based on plant samples submitted to the Hermiston Agricultural Research and Extension Center Plant Clinic of Oregon State University in 2019 and 2020. Symptoms and signs were used to evaluate disease types and determine diagnostic assays used on each submission. Plants with signs or symptoms of fungal or oomycete infection were cultured to isolate pathogenic organisms and plants with symptoms suspected to be caused by virus infection were assayed for the presence of Beet curly top virus (BCTV), viroids, and phytoplasmas using PCR, or reverse transcription (RT)-PCR. Diseases with fungal or oomycete, and virus causes accounted for 26.5 and 42.9% of submissions, respectively; coinfection of viral and fungal or oomycete pathogens were detected from 6.1% of submissions between 2019 and 2020. BCTV, a curtovirus, and hop latent viroid (HLVd) were the predominant pathogens detected from field and indoor grown hemp. Worland-like strains of BCTV represented 93% of all curtovirus detections. Eighty percent of HLVd detections occurred from plants that originated from indoor growing facilities. Based on BCTV vector, beet leafhopper, prevalence, field-grown hemp in western production regions may be affected by curly top and increasing hemp acreage in the landscape may have potential implications on other crops affected by curtoviruses. Virus and virus-like diseases could be a limiting factor for hemp production in some regions of the United States.

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