Almond can be infected by Plum Pox Virus-D isolate Penn4 and is a transmission-competent host

Plant Dis. 2024 Feb 19. doi: 10.1094/PDIS-09-23-1910-SC. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

While currently eradicated from the U.S., Plum pox virus (PPV) poses an ongoing threat to U.S. stone fruit production. Although almond (Prunus dulcis) is known to be largely resistant to PPV, there is conflicting evidence about its potential to serve as an asymptomatic reservoir host for the virus and thus serve as a potential route of entry. Here, we demonstrate that both Tuono and Texas Mission cultivars can be infected by the U.S. isolate PPV-D Penn4 and that Tuono is a transmission-competent host, capable of serving as a source of inoculum for aphid transmission of the virus. These findings have important implications for efforts to keep PPV out of the U.S. and highlights the need for additional research to test the susceptibility of almond to other PPV-D isolates.

Keywords: Prunus; almond; green peach aphid; peach; plum pox virus; risk assessment.