Quarantine plant pathogen

Enamovirus CVEV Myzus persicae Ipomovirus lycopersici

Source EPPO: CVEV00 Vector EPPO: MYZUPE Target EPPO: TOMMOV
RU A2 K-P potential

← To all hypotheses

Scoring

All four metrics are dimensionless. The total score is the product of specificity, host distance and confidence.

0.091
Specificity
1 / the number of pathogens on the vector — this vector carries 11 pathogens in EPPO.
1.00
Host distance
1.0 = no shared hosts · 0.5 = shared family · 0.2 = shared genus · 0.0 = shared species.
0.50
Confidence (K-P)
K = confirmed vector (1.0), P = potential (0.5); both edges are multiplied.
0.045
Total
specificity × host distance × confidence

Distribution: Ipomovirus lycopersici

Countries with recorded presence per the EPPO Global Database (12 ISO codes).

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Host plants: Ipomovirus lycopersici

Top 10 host taxa per EPPO; classes per EPPO host categorisation.

  • Solanum betaceum CYJBE Major host
  • Solanum lycopersicum LYPES Major host
  • Solanum melongena SOLME Major host
  • Datura stramonium DATST Wild/Weed
  • Nicandra physalodes NICPH Wild/Weed
  • Solanum nigrum SOLNI Wild/Weed
  • Datura metel DATME Experimental
  • Nicotiana benthamiana NIOBE Experimental
  • Nicotiana clevelandii NIOCL Experimental
  • Nicotiana glutinosa NIOGT Experimental

Synonyms: Ipomovirus lycopersici

  • Tomato mild mottle virus
  • Eggplant mild leaf mottle virus
  • TMMoV

Sources

Enamovirus CVEV ↔ Myzus persicae

* Hermoso de Mendoza A, Pina JA, Ballester-Olmos JF, Navarro L (1993) Persistent transmission of citrus vein enation virus by Aphis gossypii and Myzus persicae. In Proceedings of the 12th Conference of the International Organization of Citrus Virologists (IOCV), pp. 361-363.

Myzus persicae ↔ Ipomovirus lycopersici

* Abraham A, Menzel W, Vetten HJ, Winter S (2012) Analysis of the tomato mild mottle virus genome indicates that it is the most divergent member of the genus Ipomovirus (family Potyviridae). Archives of Virology 157(2), 353-357.
------- ToMMV isolates from Yemen and Ethiopia were transmitted very erratically by B. tabaci (and not by Myzus persicae).

* Hiskias Y, Lesemann DE, Vetten HJ (2001) Biological characteristics of tomato mild mottle potyvirus isolated from tomato and thorn apple in Ethiopia. African Crop Science Journal 9, 517–525.
------- Myzus persicae is considered to be a vector of ToMMV.