4.7 Article

Transmission of Blood Disease in Banana

Journal

PLANT DISEASE
Volume 106, Issue 8, Pages 2155-2164

Publisher

AMER PHYTOPATHOLOGICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1094/PDIS-10-21-2373-RE

Keywords

disease development and spread; disease management; fruit; prokaryotes; tropical plants

Categories

Funding

  1. University of Queensland
  2. Hort Innovation [BA16005]
  3. Horticulture Innovation, Australia [S120063]
  4. Endeavour Research Leadership Award-Australian
  5. Plant Biosecurity CRC [S120063]
  6. Australian Plant Biosecurity Science Foundation [PBSF016]

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This study reveals that Banana Blood disease is mainly transmitted by insects and other means. The ooze from infected male bell and the sap from various symptomatic plant parts are infective and can be easily transmitted through tools. Long-distance dispersal can occur through contaminated planting material. Disease management strategies are discussed based on these findings.
Banana Blood disease is a bacterial wilt caused by Ralstonia syzygii subsp. celebesensis and is an economically important disease in Indonesia and Malaysia. Transmission of this pathogen is hypothesized to occur through insects mechanically transferring bacteria from diseased to healthy banana inflorescences and other pathways involving pruning tools, water movement, and root-to-root contact. This study demonstrates that the ooze from the infected male bell and the sap from various symptomatic plant parts are infective, and the cut surfaces of a bunch peduncle, petiole, corm, pseudostem, and the rachis act as infection courts for R. syzygii subsp. celebesensis. In addition, evidence is provided that R. syzygii subsp. celebesensis is highly tool transmissible, that the bacterium can be transferred from the roots of a diseased plant to the roots of a healthy plant and transferred from the mother plant to the sucker. We provide evidence that local dispersal of Blood disease occurs predominantly through mechanical transmission by insects, birds, bats, or human activities from diseased to healthy banana plants and that long-distance dispersal occurs through the movement of contaminated planting material. Disease management strategies to prevent crop losses associated with this emerging disease are discussed based on our findings.

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