Plum pox virus (Sharka)

Alert

Have you seen Plum pox virus (Sharka)?

Be on the lookout and report it.

Under Queensland legislation if you suspect the presence of Plum pox virus (Sharka), you must report it to Biosecurity Queensland on 13 25 23 or contact the Exotic Plant Pest Hotline on 1800 084 881.

Early detection and reporting are key elements in controlling Plum pox virus (Sharka).

Plum pox (also known as sharka) is the most destructive disease of stone fruit worldwide, and a major threat to the Queensland stone fruit industry.

Other names

  • Sharka
  • Plum pox disease
  • PPV

Description

Symptoms

  • Symptoms can be localised, such as on a single branch or part of a tree, or the whole tree may be affected.

Leaves

  • Symptoms are most likely to develop on younger leaves in spring, including:
    • chlorotic (yellow) spots and blotches
    • vein banding, rings and line patterns
    • necrotic spots
    • leaf deformation (some peach cultivars).

Fruit

  • Develop discoloured rings, spots, or bands on the skin.
  • External pitting, grooving, sunken or bumpy areas.
  • Deformation of the fruit, including the internal flesh.
  • Discolouration and marking on the stone.
  • Premature fruit fall.
  • Loss of flavour or a bitter taste.

Flowers

  • Develop streak patterning or colour variation, particularly on peach flower petals.

Trunk

  • Bark splitting has been reported in susceptible varieties.

Plant stage and plant parts affected

Plants affected by plum pox can show a variety of symptoms depending on the strain of Plum pox virus they are infected with. The age and general health of the host plant, environmental conditions (season, temperature) and other factors can also influence the severity of symptoms present.

It is important to note that not all infected plants develop symptoms, and that symptom expression can also be transient – with plants appearing to recover.

May be confused with

Many plum pox symptoms are distinctive (i.e. leaf and fruit banding and patterning), however some of the milder symptoms can be confused with nutritional deficiencies and physical injuries, such as frost damage or insect attack (bark splitting).

Hosts

Important commercial hosts of Plum pox virus include:

  • apricot (Prunus armeniaca)
  • cherry (P. avium and P. cerasus)
  • peach (P. persica)
  • plum (P. domestica, P. salicina, and P. cerasifera)
  • nectarine (P. persica var. nectarina).

Almond (P. dulcis) can be infected, but may not develop symptoms.

It is thought that a number of ornamental Prunus species, and weed species can also carry the virus. The ability of Plum pox virus to infect Australian native plants is unknown.

Life cycle

Plum pox virus is usually transmitted from plant to plant, either through the use of infected root or scion stock, or vectored by aphids. In either case, the diseased plants act as the source of the virus.

Aphids such as Aphis spiraecola and Myzus persicae, pick up the virus by probing or feeding on infected leaves, flowers or fruit. Aphids then transfer the virus to healthy plants for a short period of time. The aphids are most effective at transferring the virus to healthy plants between 1–3 hours after they have fed on an infected plant.

Newly infected plants may take several months to develop disease symptoms.

Impacts

Stone fruit (fresh apricots, nectarines, peaches and plums) and cherry crops are valuable contributors to the Australian economy. In 2015–16, stone fruit production was valued at $176 million and cherry production was worth at $158 million. Plum pox could have a significant impact on these industries. (Source: Plant Health Australia - summerfruit, cherries)

Plum pox is extremely damaging to fruit production. Tree yields can be severely affected and up to 100% premature fruit drop has been reported in some plum varieties. Even if fruit is produced from infected trees, it is usually unsightly and misshapen, and generally unmarketable.

Excluding indirect trade costs, the economic impact associated with Plum pox virus management worldwide in the last 30 years is estimated to be 10 billion euros (Cambra et al. 2006).

Home gardeners who grow stone fruit and cherries would also be affected.

How it is spread

The movement of infected plant material such as budwood, rootstock and young plants is the main cause of long-distance spread and introduction of plum pox to new regions. The discovery of plum pox in several European countries was associated with introduction of infected nursery stock.

The Australian Government closely regulates and approves importation of Plum pox virus host plant material, and monitors for illegal plant movement. This helps to prevent the introduction of diseases such as plum pox into Australia.

Several species of aphids (Aphis spiraecola and Myzus persicae) that are widespread in Australia have been reported to be efficient vectors of Plum pox virus overseas. Other aphid species can pick up plum pox, but are reported to be less effective at spreading the disease from plant to plant.

Seed transmission of the virus is mentioned in older scientific literature, however in recent years this has been demonstrated to be untrue. Although the virus is detectable in seed coats, plants resulting from germination of this seed are not infected (Pasquini and Barba, 2016).

Monitoring and action

The greatest risk period for plum pox symptom development and disease spread is in spring and summer; when plants are actively growing and aphid populations are likely to be high.

Refer to the summerfruit orchard biosecurity manual (PDF, 2.5MB) for specific advice on how to monitor for exotic stone fruit pests and diseases.

Read the integrated pest and disease management guide for Australian summerfruit for advice on how to recognise and manage endemic stone fruit pests and diseases.

Report suspected plum pox to Biosecurity Queensland immediately on 13 25 23 or contact the Exotic Plant Pest Hotline on 1800 084 881.

Control

There is no cure for plum pox – once infected, plants/trees are infected for life. The most effective means of control is prevention.

Legal requirements

In Queensland, plum pox is prohibited matter under the Biosecurity Act 2014. Report suspected plum pox to Biosecurity Queensland on 13 25 23 without delay.

By law, everyone has a general biosecurity obligation (GBO) to take all reasonable and practical steps to minimise the risk of spreading this disease.

Further information