Response of cassava cultivars to African cassava mosaic virus infection across a range of inoculum doses and plant ages
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Abstract
Cassava production in Africa is constrained by cassava mosaic disease (CMD) that is
caused by the Cassava mosaic virus (CMV). The aim of this study was to evaluate the
responses of a range of commonly cultivated West African cassava cultivars to varying inoculum doses of African cassava mosaic virus (ACMV). We grafted 10 cultivars of cassava
plants with different inoculum doses of CMV (namely two, four, or six CMD-infected buds)
when the experimental plants were 8, 10, or 12 weeks old, using non-inoculated plants as
controls. Three cultivars showed disease symptoms when grafted with two buds, and four
cultivars showed disease symptoms when grafted with four or six buds. Most cultivars
became symptomatic six weeks after inoculation, but one (‘TMS92/0326’) was symptomatic
two weeks after inoculation, and two (‘Ntollo’ and ‘Excel’) were symptomatic after four
weeks. Root weight tended to be lower in the six-bud than in the two-bud dose, and disease
severity varied with plant age at inoculation. These results indicate that the level of CMD
resistance in cassava cultivars varies with inoculum dose and timing of infection. This will
allow appropriate cultivars to be deployed in each production zone of Africa in accordance
with the prevalence of CMD.
