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Threat: Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (TYLCV) causes a devastating disease complex of tomato in tropical and warm temperate regions, resulting in crop losses of up to 100%.
About the pest: The main host of TYLCV is tomato. A range of other hosts includes capsicum, eggplant, lisianthus, poinsettia, beans, and black nightshade.
Symptoms of TYLCV vary depending on the growth stage at the time of initial infection, environmental conditions and cultivars.
In tomatoes, symptoms include severe stunting, marked reduction in leaf size, upward cupping, chlorosis of leaf margins, mottling, flower abscission and significant yield reduction.
Symptoms in common bean include leaf thickening, leaf crumpling, upward curling of leaves, abnormal lateral shoot proliferation, deformation and reduction in the number of pods.
Spread: TYLCV can be spread on infected plants or via its main vector, silverleaf whitefly Bemisia tabaci biotype B. Silverleaf whitefly is known to occur in Queensland, New South Wales, Northern Territory and Western Australia and has a wide host range, enabling it to rapidly spread TYLCV.
More information:
New South Wales Agriculture
Queensland Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries
PaDIL – Pest and Disease Image Library
Photo: Queensland Department of Primary Industries and Fisheries
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