Published June 12, 2013 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Data from: Reduction of leaf area and symptom severity as proxies of disease-induced plant mortality: the example of the Cauliflower mosaic virus infecting two Brassicaceae hosts

  • 1. French National Institute for Agricultural Research
  • 2. French National Centre for Scientific Research

Description

Disease induced effects on host survival are important to understand the evolution of parasitic virulence and host resistance/tolerance. Unfortunately, experiments evaluating such effects are in most cases logistically demanding justifying the measurement of survival proxies. For plant hosts commonly used proxies are leaf area and the nature and severity of visual qualitative disease symptoms. In this study we tested whether these traits are indeed correlated to the host mortality rate induced by viral infection. We infected Brassica rapa and Arabidopsis thaliana plants with different natural isolates of Cauliflower mosaic virus (CaMV) and estimated over time the development of symptoms and the relative reduction of leaf area compared to healthy plants and followed plant mortality. We observed that the mortality of infected plants was correlated with the relative reduction of leaf area of both B. rapa and A. thaliana. Measures of mortality were also correlated with the severity of visual qualitative symptoms but the magnitude of the correlations and the time frame at which they were significant depended on the host plant: stronger and earlier correlations were observed on A. thaliana.

Notes

Files

Files (315.9 kB)

Name Size Download all
md5:b36abf0413a5539a164d4fb009582964
79.4 kB Download
md5:b2fa77ea73f2febda88547e838ec2e0e
123.4 kB Download
md5:6d2dceff00702b944fb42bb8f64e5310
74.2 kB Download
md5:47c732a813e05ac3f4fbd4c46c8ea327
38.9 kB Download

Additional details

Related works