Viral diseases of cowpea and their control by resistance conferring genes

Cowpea crops are susceptible low more than 20 viral diseases. Some of the most destructive viral pathogens are transmitted from one plant generation to the next through the seed, and thus are generally disseminated to most cowpea-producing regions of the world. Seedborne cowpea viruses, after establishment in plantings as seedborne inoculum, are typically spread within fields by insect vectors (either aphid or beetle species). The most effective control of cowpea viral diseases, universally, has been the development of improved genotypes with resistance to viral infection. The historic productiveness of cowpea breeder-geneticists, describing genes/ resistance to almost every major virus, now provides opportunities to develop multiple resistance to diseases, insect pests, Striga spp., and drought. Although cowpea may lag behind other major food plants in the availability of superior new cultivars with multiple-disease/pest resistance, an extremely valuable base of germplasm exists for much greater development and utilization in the future.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hampton, R., Thottappilly, G., Rossel, H.
Format: Book Chapter biblioteca
Language:English
Published: 1997
Subjects:pathogens, genotypes, viral diseases, cowpeas, seedborne, molecular,
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95977
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spelling dig-cgspace-10568-959772023-06-08T14:19:12Z Viral diseases of cowpea and their control by resistance conferring genes Hampton, R. Thottappilly, G. Rossel, H. pathogens genotypes viral diseases cowpeas seedborne molecular Cowpea crops are susceptible low more than 20 viral diseases. Some of the most destructive viral pathogens are transmitted from one plant generation to the next through the seed, and thus are generally disseminated to most cowpea-producing regions of the world. Seedborne cowpea viruses, after establishment in plantings as seedborne inoculum, are typically spread within fields by insect vectors (either aphid or beetle species). The most effective control of cowpea viral diseases, universally, has been the development of improved genotypes with resistance to viral infection. The historic productiveness of cowpea breeder-geneticists, describing genes/ resistance to almost every major virus, now provides opportunities to develop multiple resistance to diseases, insect pests, Striga spp., and drought. Although cowpea may lag behind other major food plants in the availability of superior new cultivars with multiple-disease/pest resistance, an extremely valuable base of germplasm exists for much greater development and utilization in the future. 1997 2018-07-05T06:30:21Z 2018-07-05T06:30:21Z Book Chapter Hampton, R., Thottappilly, G. & Rossel, H. (1997). Viral diseases of cowpea and their control by resistance-conferring genes. In B.B. Singh, D.R. Mohan Raji and K.E. Dashiel, Advances in cowpea research. Ibadan, Nigeria: IITA, (p. 159-175). https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95977 en Open Access p. 159-175
institution CGIAR
collection DSpace
country Francia
countrycode FR
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-cgspace
tag biblioteca
region Europa del Oeste
libraryname Biblioteca del CGIAR
language English
topic pathogens
genotypes
viral diseases
cowpeas
seedborne
molecular
pathogens
genotypes
viral diseases
cowpeas
seedborne
molecular
spellingShingle pathogens
genotypes
viral diseases
cowpeas
seedborne
molecular
pathogens
genotypes
viral diseases
cowpeas
seedborne
molecular
Hampton, R.
Thottappilly, G.
Rossel, H.
Viral diseases of cowpea and their control by resistance conferring genes
description Cowpea crops are susceptible low more than 20 viral diseases. Some of the most destructive viral pathogens are transmitted from one plant generation to the next through the seed, and thus are generally disseminated to most cowpea-producing regions of the world. Seedborne cowpea viruses, after establishment in plantings as seedborne inoculum, are typically spread within fields by insect vectors (either aphid or beetle species). The most effective control of cowpea viral diseases, universally, has been the development of improved genotypes with resistance to viral infection. The historic productiveness of cowpea breeder-geneticists, describing genes/ resistance to almost every major virus, now provides opportunities to develop multiple resistance to diseases, insect pests, Striga spp., and drought. Although cowpea may lag behind other major food plants in the availability of superior new cultivars with multiple-disease/pest resistance, an extremely valuable base of germplasm exists for much greater development and utilization in the future.
format Book Chapter
topic_facet pathogens
genotypes
viral diseases
cowpeas
seedborne
molecular
author Hampton, R.
Thottappilly, G.
Rossel, H.
author_facet Hampton, R.
Thottappilly, G.
Rossel, H.
author_sort Hampton, R.
title Viral diseases of cowpea and their control by resistance conferring genes
title_short Viral diseases of cowpea and their control by resistance conferring genes
title_full Viral diseases of cowpea and their control by resistance conferring genes
title_fullStr Viral diseases of cowpea and their control by resistance conferring genes
title_full_unstemmed Viral diseases of cowpea and their control by resistance conferring genes
title_sort viral diseases of cowpea and their control by resistance conferring genes
publishDate 1997
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/95977
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