Effect of thermic treatment on the presence of virus in garlic (Allium sativum L.) bulbs

Authors

  • Rodolfo Velásquez-Valle Programas de Fitopatología, Biología Molecular y Hortalizas del Campo Experimental Zacatecas - INIFAP, Carretera Zacatecas - Fresnillo, Calera de V. R., Zacatecas, México, C. P. 98500
  • Manuel Reveles-Hernández Programas de Fitopatología, Biología Molecular y Hortalizas del Campo Experimental Zacatecas - INIFAP, Carretera Zacatecas - Fresnillo, Calera de V. R., Zacatecas, México, C. P. 98500
  • Yasmín Ileana Chew- Medinaveitia Programa de Fitopatología del Campo Experimental La Laguna - INIFAP, Boulevard José Santos Valdez Pte. 1200, Matamoros, Coahuila, México, C. P. 27440
  • Luis Roberto Reveles-Torres Programas de Fitopatología, Biología Molecular y Hortalizas del Campo Experimental Zacatecas - INIFAP, Carretera Zacatecas - Fresnillo, Calera de V. R., Zacatecas, México, C. P. 98500

Keywords:

thermic treatment, garlic varieties, virus, DAS-ELISA

Abstract

It was evaluated the virus presence in cloves of 24 varieties of garlic before and after being thermo-treated using the serological technique DAS-ELISA for TEV, SLV, GarCLV, OYDV, and LYSV. Garlic bulbs were exposed to 33 ± 1 ºC during a period of six weeks. After thermic treatment, 23 varieties had one virus at least; however, none of the five viruses was detected in the cloves of the variety Español, also, the variety ChJO 13 was only positive to TEV. TEV was the more persistent virus through the thermic treatment. In spite of virus or variety, the percentage of virus-positive cloves was 53.5 and 45.1% before and after thermic treatment respectively. Most of the cloves showed multiple infections in diverse combinations. Only TEV and SLV appeared as single infections or with only one virus; after thermic treatment only TEV kept this characteristic. Viral concentration for TEV did not show significant changes before and after thermic treatment.

Published

30-06-2017

Issue

Section

Plant protection