2004 National Allium Research Conference
Poster Presentation - Pest Management

GEOSPATIAL RELATIONSHIPS OF IRIS YELLOW SPOT VIRUS AND THRIPS TO ONION
PRODUCTION IN COLORADO, 2004
S. M. Fichtner, D. H. Gent, H. F. Schwartz, W. S. Cranshaw, L. Mahaffey,
and R. Khosla.
Dept. of Bioagri. Sciences & Pest Management and Soil & Crop Sciences,
Colorado State Univ., Fort Collins, CO 80523-1177
Iris Yellow Spot Virus (IYSV) is a devastating pathogen on onion
production in several US onion producing regions. Onion producers in
Colorado are one of the most recent groups impacted by the IYSV pathogen. At
this time no known alternate host has been identified in the state. Studies
have found that the virus does arrive each year on transplants brought in
from outside the state. The research we are conducting looks at the spatial
and temporal distribution of IYSV in Colorado onion fields. Data collection
and mapping were performed using Global positioning systems (GPS) and
Geographical information systems (GIS). In 2004, three commercial onion
fields along the Colorado Front-Range were chosen. Two of these fields did
not produce visual symptoms of IYS. The third field was seeded with both red
(Tango) and white (Sterling) cultivars. Six visual observations were made on
approximately 5 to 10 day intervals beginning in early August. Initial
symptom development appeared to coincide with harvest of infested onion
transplants near our field location. The two cultivars were analyzed
separately. The Morans I spatial autocorrelation coefficients for cultivar
Tango (0.09) and Sterling (0.03) were significant (P<0.001 and P=0.03,
respectively); although the very small values indicate little spatial
dependency existed between sample locations at the half acre scale. Total
yield as well as jumbo and medium market class onions were negatively
correlated with IYS incidence in cultivar Tango (R2=0.3137, P=0.0024;
R2=0.3923, P=0.0005; R2=0.1910, P=0.0227, respectively). Yield of medium
market class onions of cultivar Sterling was negatively correlated to
increasing IYS incidence (R2=0.1693, P=0.0457). Also, plant population of
cultivar Sterling had a negative correlation to incidence of IYS (R2=0.2566,
P=0.0115). Total yield and jumbo market class were not significantly
correlated to disease incidence for this cultivar. The preliminary results
of this study indicate that sampling must occur at a scale smaller than 0.5
acres to obtain strong positive spatial autocorrelation and determine
whether secondary spread of IYSV plays a significant role in disease
progression.
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