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Tomato yellow leaf curl virus (leaf curl).

2021
Abstract The wide global distribution of tomato crops and the dramatic outbreaks of the populations of the TYLCV vector, the whitefly Bemisia tabaci, led to a pandemic of this devastating disease. The virus probably arose in the Middle East between the 1930s and 1950s.
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Cotton leaf curl virus (leaf curl disease of cotton).

2021
Abstract Leaf curl disease of cotton caused by the CLCuD-complex of begomoviruses is endemic to Pakistan and India and perhaps other nearby locales in south Asia. It has been introduced from there to China and the Philippines on ornamental plants, from where it has spread to infect cotton and okra in China.
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Association of chili leaf curl betasatellite with tomato leaf curl disease

Journal of General Plant Pathology, 2017
Leaf samples of Solanum lycopersicum exhibiting the tomato leaf curl disease (ToLCD) symptoms were collected from different genotypes. PCR amplifications confirmed the presence of Tomato leaf curl New Delhi virus (ToLCNDV) and betasatellite. Molecular analysis of betasatellite nucleotide sequences showed high level of sequence identity (99%) with chili
Muhammad Qasim Aslam   +5 more
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Tomato leaf curl diseases in the Sudan and their relation to tobacco leaf curl

Annals of Applied Biology, 1965
SUMMARYThe viruses causing two tomato leaf‐curl diseases, tomato leaf curl without vein thickening (TLCV) and tomato leaf curl with vein thickening (TVTV), were both transmissible (to tomato and other hosts) by the aleurodid Bemisia tabaci (=B. gossypiperda M. & L.) and by grafting, but not by mechanical inoculation of expressed sap. A third virus,
A. M. YASSIN, M. A. NOUR
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Cotton leaf curl virus disease

Virus Research, 2000
Cotton is one of the most important crops of Pakistan, accounting for over 60% of foreign exchange earnings. The present epidemic of cotton leaf curl disease (CLCuD) originated in the Punjab region near the city of Multan and was first reported in 1985, although it was noted in this region as early as 1967.
R W, Briddon, P G, Markham
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Clones of Cotton Leaf Curl Geminivirus Induce Symptoms Atypical of Cotton Leaf Curl Disease

Virus Genes, 2000
The causative agent of cotton leaf curl disease has previously been shown to be transmissible by the whitefly Bemisia tabaci (Gennadius) and a begomovirus (Geminiviridae) was shown to be associated with the disease. This virus was provisionally called cotton leaf curl virus (CLCuV) although no causal relationship between virus and disease was shown. In
R W, Briddon   +4 more
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Infectivity of Euphorbia leaf curl virus and interaction with Tomato yellow leaf curl China betasatellite

Archives of Virology, 2010
To investigate the infectivity of Euphorbia leaf curl virus (EuLCV), an infectious clone was constructed and tested by agroinoculation and whitefly inoculation. EuLCV infected Nicotiana benthamiana, N. glutinosa, Solanum lycopersicum, Petunia hybrida efficiently upon agroinoculation and induced leaf curling, vein swelling and stunting in these plants ...
Jianbing, Wu   +2 more
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Cotton leaf curl Gezira virus (African cotton leaf curl Begomovirus).

2021
Abstract Cotton leaf curl Gezira virus (CLCuGV) is endemic to the African Sahel region (Idris et al., 2000). It is an economically important cotton-infecting begomovirus, and poses a serious threat to cotton production. It causes yield loss in all affected cotton-growing areas in Africa.
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Beet leaf curl virus (leaf curl)

PlantwisePlus Knowledge Bank, 2022
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Squash leaf curl virus (leaf curl of squash)

PlantwisePlus Knowledge Bank, 2022
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