News section
New breakthroughs aid in controlling sterility mosaic disease, "green plague" of pigeonpea
April 15, 2004

Sterility mosaic disease—the “green plague” of pigeonpea: advances in understanding the etiology, transmission and control of a major cirus disease
A. Teifion Jones, Scottish Crop Research Institute (SCRI), Scotland, UK; P. Lava Kumar, International Crops Research Institute for the Semi-Arid Tropics (ICRISAT), Patancheru, India, and SCRI; K. B. Saxena, ICRISAT; N. K. Kulkarni, University of Agriculture Sciences (UAS), Bangalore, India, and ICRISAT; V. Muniyappa, University of Agriculture Sciences, Bangalore, India; and Farid Waliyar, ICRISAT. Plant Dis. D-2004-0308-01F.

Pigeonpea (Cajanus cajan), is a grain legume that is a very important subsistence crop in marginal farming systems adopted by millions of smallholder farmers in the Indian subcontinent. It is grown for its seed for human consumption and for income generation by trading surpluses in local and commercial markets, but is widely used for diverse purposes, including as animal fodder and for soil conservation. Sterility mosaic (SMD) is the most damaging disease of pigeonpea endemic in the Indian subcontinent. It causes yield losses of >US$300 million per annum in India and Nepal alone. SMD-affected plants show severe stunting and mosaic symptoms on leaves, with complete or partial cessation of flowering. The SMD causal agent is spread by the arthropod mite vector Aceria cajani (Acari: Eriophyidae). Cultivating SMD-resistant genotypes is the most viable way to manage this serious disease of pigeonpea. Progress in developing broad-based SMD resistant material has been hindered by the lack of knowledge of the causal agent, the absence of diagnostic tools, and factors influencing host-plant resistance. After seven decades of research, vital breakthroughs made on the identification, detection, transmission, and epidemiology of the SMD causal agent, Pigeonpea sterility mosaic virus (PPSMV), are enabling the development of broad-based durable resistant pigeonpea cultivars. These breakthroughs will contribute greatly to sustainable pigeonpea production and enhance the income and livelihood of poor farmers in the semi-arid tropics of the Indian subcontinent.

The current issue of APSNet, Volume 88, Number 5, May 2004, is at http://www.apsnet.org/pd/current/top.asp

APSNet Interpretive summary

Other news from this source

8379

Back to main news page

The news release or news item on this page is copyright © 2004 by the organization where it originated.
The content of the SeedQuest website is copyright © 1992-2004 by
SeedQuest - All rights reserved
Fair Use Notice