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Relation of boron to cherry rosette disease in Oregon, and the possible implication in Oregon, and the possible implication of a virus

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Title Relation of boron to cherry rosette disease in Oregon, and the possible implication in Oregon, and the possible implication of a virus
Names Bolwyn, Bart (creator)
Milbrath, J. A. (advisor)
Date Issued 1967-08-18 (iso8601)
Note Graduation date: 1968
Abstract A disease of sweet cherry (Prunus avium L.) known as "cherry
rosette" has threatened production of cherries in Oregon. In 1961
this disease was observed in widely separated orchards. Rosette
occurred in isolated trees or in spreading patterns, often from
identified single trees or from one section of an orchard. A similar
problem in 1953 is suspected to have been rosette.
Rosette symptoms in cherry closely resembled those described
for boron deficiency of stone fruits, but boron deficiency was not
recognized as a problem of cherries in Oregon. Transmission by
grafting, occurrence over a large area in trees on varying soils,
and the spread in and among trees all suggested a virus as the causal
agent of rosette.
Boron spray trials were conducted in four commercial
orchards. Leaf samples were collected monthly to determine the
relation between boron levels and severity of rosette symptoms. In
the spring the occurrence of rosette symptoms was correlated with a
low boron content, but severity of symptoms did not vary directly
with boron level. Foliar boron content increased from spring until
midsummer, then levelled off and decreased in the fall. Analysis
for boron in leaf samples collected in August rarily indicated boron
deficiency in rosetted trees. The occurrence of rosette was not
correlated with deviations from normal temperature and precipitation.
However, a good positive correlation between winterstorms and the
erratic occurrence of rosette was shown.
Mahaleb and peach seedlings, graft inoculated with buds from
rosetted trees, were used as intermediate hosts to permit mechanical
transfer of a virus to herbaceous species. Direct mechanical transfer
of viruses from cherries to herbaceous hosts is prevented by
inhibitors. By using peach and mahaleb seedlings an unknown virus
was isolated from two rosetted cherry trees and one rosetted peach
tree. This unknown virus has not yet been implicated in a direct
cause-and-effect relationship with rosette. No local-lesion assay
host was found for the virus. The unknown virus induced a distinct
epinasty of inoculated primary leaves of certain bean varieties, as
did a cowpea strain of cucumber mosaic virus (CMV-CS). This and
other evidence suggested that the unknown virus could be a strain of
CMV. Serological tests with CMV antisera were inconclusive.
A hypothesis has been presented that in cherry trees in soils with a marginal boron content, a delicate balance exists between
boron supply and demand during budbreak and flowering. Storm
damage to root systems probably reduces boron uptake, and a virus
possibly could slow the flow of boron to sites with high rates of
growth.
A boron deficiency, no matter how induced, at a critical
time in the development of leaves and flowers is the cause of cherry
rosette. Boron sprays have corrected and prevented rosette in
cherry trees. Recommendations were made for amount and time of
application.
Genre Thesis/Dissertation
Topic Cherry -- Diseases and pests
Identifier http://hdl.handle.net/1957/46579

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