The ecology and epidemiology of whitefly-transmitted viruses in Latin America.

Abstract

Whitefly-transmitted geminiviruses are the most important constraint to the production of common bean and vegetable crops in the tropical lowlands and mid-altitude valleys of Latin America. Currently, over 30 distinct species of geminiviruses that are transmitted by the whitefly Bemisia tabaci infect common bean, tomato, pepper, cucurbits and other horticultural crops. A climate probability model (using FloraMap) was obtained using data from 304 geo-referenced locations where B. tabaci and geminiviruses cause significant damage. Clustering of the 304 points produced a simple model with two climatic variables: a dry season of at least 4 months each with less than 80 mm of rain and a mean temperature of the hottest month exceeding 21 °C. A modified Koeppen climate classification showed that 55% of the geminivirus-affected localities are in the tropical wet/dry region, 22% in the tropical and subtropical dry/humid climates and the remaining locations belonged to the wet equatorial and trade wind litoral climates. These findings contribute to understanding whitefly/geminivirus epidemics and implementation of sustainable integrated pest and disease management practices.

Citation

Morales, F.J.; Jones, P. The ecology and epidemiology of whitefly-transmitted viruses in Latin America. Virus Research (2004) 100 (1) 57-65. [DOI: 10.1016/j.virusres.2003.12.014]

The ecology and epidemiology of whitefly-transmitted viruses in Latin America.

Published 1 January 2004