TY - JOUR
T1 - Occurrence of cucumber green mottle mosaic virus in Western Australia
AU - Kehoe, Monica A.
AU - Webster, Craig
AU - Wang, Cuiping
AU - Jones, Roger A.C.
AU - Coutts, Brenda A.
PY - 2022/1/7
Y1 - 2022/1/7
N2 - In 2014, cucumber green mottle mosaic virus (CGMMV) was detected for the first time in Australia infecting watermelon crops in the Northern Territory (NT). In July 2016, a leaf sample was collected from a cucumber plant with leaf mottle and distortion symptoms growing in a commercial plastic tunnel house at Geraldton, Western Australia (WA). Testing by multiple methods confirmed CGMMV presence in the cucumber sample. Delimiting surveys of five of the main cucurbit growing areas in WA were conducted to determine the extent of CGMMV occurrence. This survey included commercial cucurbit farms (field and protected cropping), roadside verges (primarily Cucurbitaceae weeds) and seedling nurseries. A total of 22,905 leaf samples from cucurbit crop plants or weeds were collected and tested for CGMMV. Out of the 95 locations surveyed, 16 locations in the Kununurra, Carnarvon, Geraldton or Perth cropping regions were found to have plants infected with CGMMV. CGMMV was detected in cucumber, rockmelon, honeydew melon and watermelon crops in the open field or protected cropping facilities, and in the native plant Cucumis myriocarpus and naturalized weed Cucumis variabilis. Seven whole genome sequences of CGMMV were obtained using high throughput sequencing (HTS), with 99.1–99.9% nucleotide identities to each other. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the 7 new sequences grouped with 2 other Australian sequences, two from the USA and one from the Netherlands. This highlights the limited genetic diversity of CGMMV within Australia suggesting a single recent incursion.
AB - In 2014, cucumber green mottle mosaic virus (CGMMV) was detected for the first time in Australia infecting watermelon crops in the Northern Territory (NT). In July 2016, a leaf sample was collected from a cucumber plant with leaf mottle and distortion symptoms growing in a commercial plastic tunnel house at Geraldton, Western Australia (WA). Testing by multiple methods confirmed CGMMV presence in the cucumber sample. Delimiting surveys of five of the main cucurbit growing areas in WA were conducted to determine the extent of CGMMV occurrence. This survey included commercial cucurbit farms (field and protected cropping), roadside verges (primarily Cucurbitaceae weeds) and seedling nurseries. A total of 22,905 leaf samples from cucurbit crop plants or weeds were collected and tested for CGMMV. Out of the 95 locations surveyed, 16 locations in the Kununurra, Carnarvon, Geraldton or Perth cropping regions were found to have plants infected with CGMMV. CGMMV was detected in cucumber, rockmelon, honeydew melon and watermelon crops in the open field or protected cropping facilities, and in the native plant Cucumis myriocarpus and naturalized weed Cucumis variabilis. Seven whole genome sequences of CGMMV were obtained using high throughput sequencing (HTS), with 99.1–99.9% nucleotide identities to each other. Phylogenetic analysis showed that the 7 new sequences grouped with 2 other Australian sequences, two from the USA and one from the Netherlands. This highlights the limited genetic diversity of CGMMV within Australia suggesting a single recent incursion.
KW - CGMMV
KW - Cucumber green mottle mosaic virus
KW - Genomics
KW - Phylogenetics
KW - Plant virology
KW - Survey
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85122338806&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/s13313-021-00814-z
DO - 10.1007/s13313-021-00814-z
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85122338806
VL - 51
JO - Australasian Plant Pathology
JF - Australasian Plant Pathology
SN - 0815-3191
IS - 1
ER -