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https://wpcdn.web.wsu.edu/cahnrs/uploads/sites/41/tomatomv1.jpg

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/372744714/figure/fig1/AS%3A11431281212177805%401702555018377/The-tomato-mosaic-virus-ToMV-infection-symptoms-occur-in-tomato-leaves-fruits-and.tif

https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/media/images/1_lF2x8mi.jpeg


If you work with tomatoes (or other solanaceous crops) in Pakistan or elsewhere, you may want to know about ToMV (Tomato mosaic virus)—it’s one of the more stubborn plant viruses that can cause big losses if unmanaged. Here’s a fresh article you can post on Quora, aimed at growers, extension agents, and ag-business professionals.


What is ToMV?

Tomato mosaic virus (ToMV) belongs to the genus Tobamovirus and is a close relative of the classic Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). ScienceDirect+3NC State Extension+3hexafarms.com+3
It primarily infects tomato plants (Solanum lycopersicum) but can also affect other plants in the Solanaceae family (eg. peppers, eggplant) and even some weeds or ornamentals. NC State Extension
What makes it especially tricky: the virus is very persistent, easily transmitted by contact or contaminated tools/seed, and current control is mostly preventive rather than curative. hexafarms.com+1.com+1


Why Should Growers Care?

  • Reduced yield & quality: Infected plants often show stunted growth, mosaic or mottled leaves, deformed fruits, uneven ripening or internal fruit damage — all of which cut market value. hexafarms.com+1
  • Long-term persistence: The virus can survive in plant debris, soil and on equipment for long periods (sometimes up to 1-2 years) which means once it enters a crop it can haunt subsequent plantings. NC State Extension
  • Resistance challenges: While resistant tomato varieties exist, new ToMV isolates are emerging that overcome major resistance genes (e.g., the Tm-22 gene) making management more complex. PubMed
  • Economic impact: For greenhouse growers or commercial operations in Pakistan, any reduction in fruit quality or marketability hits profits. Early recognition and strong management are essential.

Typical Symptoms to Look For

Knowing what to spot early gives you a chance to intervene. Look out for:


  • Mosaic or mottled patterns of light and dark green on leaves. NC State Extension
  • Leaf curling, distortion, narrowing of leaflets, wrinkling. hexafarms.com.com
  • Fruits that show uneven ripening, blotches, internal browning (sometimes called “brownwall”). veggiescout.mgcafe.uky.edu.mgcafe.uky.edu
  • Stunted plants, reduced vigor, poor fruit set.
  • On greenhouse operations: consistently lower yields, plants failing to meet normal growth benchmarks.

How the Virus Spreads

  • Mechanical transmission: hands, gloves, tools, greenhouse equipment that touch infected plants and then healthy ones. NC State Extension
  • Seed-borne infection: infected seed or seedlings can introduce the virus into new plantings. hexafarms.com.com
  • Contact with infected plant debris or soil. The virus can persist in dead plant material and in soil/greenhouse surfaces. NC State Extension
  • Less commonly: grafting with contaminated scions, or interactions with tobacco products in the vicinity. hexafarms.com

Best Practices for Management & Prevention

Because there’s no chemical “cure” for ToMV, prevention is key. Here’s a practical checklist:


  1. Use certified disease-free seed and seedlings.
  2. Choose resistant cultivars if available (with genes like Tm-1, Tm-2, Tm-22) but remain aware of emerging resistance-breaking strains. PubMed
  3. Sanitation:
    • Clean/disinfect tools and equipment regularly.
    • Remove and destroy infected plants and debris as soon as symptoms are spotted. veggiescout.mgcafe.uky.edu
    • Limit contact with plants from tobacco fields or places where TMV/ToMV may persist.
  4. Plant spacing & greenhouse hygiene: reduce plant-to-plant contact, ensure good airflow, remove weeds and hosts around the crop. NC State Extension
  5. Rotate crops: avoid successive plantings of the same host family in the same ground or greenhouse without break or sanitation.
  6. Monitor early & regularly: Training staff to identify early signs will reduce spread before it becomes epidemic.
  7. Biological/induced-resistance approaches: New research shows promise — e.g., use of microalgae treatments to boost plant defence pathways against ToMV. SpringerOpen
  8. Record-keeping: note where and when infections occur, cultivar used, seed source etc. This helps with tracing and preventing future outbreaks.
 
Last edited:

Puesmira

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https://wpcdn.web.wsu.edu/cahnrs/uploads/sites/41/tomatomv1.jpg

https://www.researchgate.net/publication/372744714/figure/fig1/AS%3A11431281212177805%401702555018377/The-tomato-mosaic-virus-ToMV-infection-symptoms-occur-in-tomato-leaves-fruits-and.tif

https://content.ces.ncsu.edu/media/images/1_lF2x8mi.jpeg


If you work with tomatoes (or other solanaceous crops) in Pakistan or elsewhere, you may want to know about ToMV (Tomato mosaic virus)—it’s one of the more stubborn plant viruses that can cause big losses if unmanaged. Here’s a fresh article you can post on Quora, aimed at growers, extension agents, and ag-business professionals.


What is ToMV?

Tomato mosaic virus (ToMV) belongs to the genus Tobamovirus and is a close relative of the classic Tobacco mosaic virus (TMV). ScienceDirect+3NC State Extension+3hexafarms.com+3
It primarily infects tomato plants (Solanum lycopersicum) but can also affect other plants in the Solanaceae family (eg. peppers, eggplant) and even some weeds or ornamentals. NC State Extension
What makes it especially tricky: the virus is very persistent, easily transmitted by contact or contaminated tools/seed, and current control is mostly preventive rather than curative. hexafarms.com+1


Why Should Growers Care?

  • Reduced yield & quality: Infected plants often show stunted growth, mosaic or mottled leaves, deformed fruits, uneven ripening or internal fruit damage — all of which cut market value. hexafarms.com+1
  • Long-term persistence: The virus can survive in plant debris, soil and on equipment for long periods (sometimes up to 1-2 years) which means once it enters a crop it can haunt subsequent plantings. NC State Extension
  • Resistance challenges: While resistant tomato varieties exist, new ToMV isolates are emerging that overcome major resistance genes (e.g., the Tm-22 gene) making management more complex. PubMed
  • Economic impact: For greenhouse growers or commercial operations in Pakistan, any reduction in fruit quality or marketability hits profits. Early recognition and strong management are essential.

Typical Symptoms to Look For

Knowing what to spot early gives you a chance to intervene. Look out for:


  • Mosaic or mottled patterns of light and dark green on leaves. NC State Extension
  • Leaf curling, distortion, narrowing of leaflets, wrinkling. hexafarms.com
  • Fruits that show uneven ripening, blotches, internal browning (sometimes called “brownwall”). veggiescout.mgcafe.uky.edu
  • Stunted plants, reduced vigor, poor fruit set.
  • On greenhouse operations: consistently lower yields, plants failing to meet normal growth benchmarks.

How the Virus Spreads

  • Mechanical transmission: hands, gloves, tools, greenhouse equipment that touch infected plants and then healthy ones. NC State Extension
  • Seed-borne infection: infected seed or seedlings can introduce the virus into new plantings. hexafarms.com
  • Contact with infected plant debris or soil. The virus can persist in dead plant material and in soil/greenhouse surfaces. NC State Extension
  • Less commonly: grafting with contaminated scions, or interactions with tobacco products in the vicinity. hexafarms.com

Best Practices for Management & Prevention

Because there’s no chemical “cure” for ToMV, prevention is key. Here’s a practical checklist:


  1. Use certified disease-free seed and seedlings.
  2. Choose resistant cultivars if available (with genes like Tm-1, Tm-2, Tm-22) but remain aware of emerging resistance-breaking strains. PubMed
  3. Sanitation:
    • Clean/disinfect tools and equipment regularly.
    • Remove and destroy infected plants and debris as soon as symptoms are spotted. veggiescout.mgcafe.uky.edu
    • Limit contact with plants from tobacco fields or places where TMV/ToMV may persist.
  4. Plant spacing & greenhouse hygiene: reduce plant-to-plant contact, ensure good airflow, remove weeds and hosts around the crop. NC State Extension
  5. Rotate crops: avoid successive plantings of the same host family in the same ground or greenhouse without break or sanitation.
  6. Monitor early & regularly: Training staff to identify early signs will reduce spread before it becomes epidemic.
  7. Biological/induced-resistance approaches: New research shows promise — e.g., use of microalgae treatments to boost plant defence pathways against ToMV. SpringerOpen
  8. Record-keeping: note where and when infections occur, cultivar used, seed source etc. This helps with tracing and preventing future outbreaks.
How can tomato growers in Pakistan effectively prevent and manage Tomato Mosaic Virus (ToMV) infections in greenhouses and open fields?
 

Diamondbit

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How can tomato growers in Pakistan effectively prevent and manage Tomato Mosaic Virus (ToMV) infections in greenhouses and open fields?
Quick summary (TL;DR)

Prevent first: certified virus-free seed/seedlings and resistant varieties should be used where possible.

Hygiene prevails: disinfect hands, equipment, poles, and surfaces between contacts. Limit human movement.

Watch and patrol: examine habitually; eradicate and destroy infected vegetation on the spot.

Do not become complacent: ToMV is not transmitted through insects (mostly by mechanical/seed), therefore, consider sanitation and seed well-being instead of insecticides.

Get testing: make sure that putative infections are tested with ELISA/PCR before decisions on large-scale removals are made.

1) Prevention (most important)

Purchase certified seed and seedlings free of virus.

Transmission of seeds may take place and therefore begin with seed that is certified to be free of tobamoviruses or get seedlings that have been tested in certified nurseries.

Use resistant varieties wherever possible.

A variety of tomatoes available today contain genes that are resistant (ask your local seed supplier/extension what varieties have ToMV resistance). One of the most useful and the easiest actions is the use of resistant cultivars.

Hygee in nursery / handling of seedlings.

Keep housing of seedlings clean, do not touch plants when they are not necessary and no incoming trays should mix with production space before being checked.

Quarantine new plants.

Isolate fresh transplantation one week and examine and then introduce the transplantation to the primary crop.

2) Environmental controls (green house and field) sanitation and cultural.

Wipe down the tools and surfaces.

Wipe pruners, knives, stakes, trays and table surfaces; between plant/rows with a fresh disinfectant solution. Effective options:

Household bleach (sodium hypochlorite) dilution containing a 1:910 ratio of household bleach to water (get fresh each day) to be used in tools. Prepare/immerse equipment 1-2 minutes; dry surface and allow contact to take place some minutes.

Isopropyl ethanol 70% is fast in working with small tools and hands (short contact time).

Business virucidal disinfectants (adhere to label directions).

Practical rule: disinfect movement between plots, touching symptomatic plants, and at the beginning/end of every working shift.

Hygiene of workers and movement control.

Educate train workers to wash or disinfect hands and gloves.

Sharing Teams Sharing Teams Place one team in each block of the greenhouse, or each row in the field.

Gloves: Disposable or use another block of gloves.

Tools & equipment management.

Assign equipment to blocks where feasible.

Do not share stakes, clips, harvest bins or scissors without disinfection.

Wipe off stakes, trellises, harvest containers.

Equipment are a common source of contamination.

Eradicate weed hosts and volunteer vegetation.

The virus can be trapped by solanaceous weeds (e.g., nightshades) and volunteer tomatoes plants - eliminate immediately.

Fallow intervals and crop rotation.

Plant non-host crops at least once in the growing period and rake up all plant debris at the end of the growing period.

Properly dispose and clean up crop debris.

Infected plant material should not be composted in an accessible pile of compost (except in a well-managed compost system of high temperature that is known to reliably kill viruses). Best practice: burn or inter deep-bury waste product off-site.

3) Surveillance, diagnosing and reaction.

Frequent scouting.

Check plants once in a week (more frequently in seedlings and young plants). Search mosaic on leaves, distortion, stunting or strange fruit symptoms.

Confirm with lab tests.

ELISA or PCR before major responses should be confirmed with Agricultural extension laboratory or plant disease diagnostic clinic on suspected ToMV.

Destroy plants that are rogue and destroy.

After confirmed or through strong suspicion, pull out symptomatic plants, bag them and destroy (burn/deep bury). Once removed, sanitize around the equipment and instruments and keep an eye on nearby plants.

Traceback & containment.

Surveillance of nearby blocks and recent employees in case of any spreading; check more often and think about temporary geographical isolation.

4) Field-specific tips

Precautions should be taken when handling plants, as mechanical injury may cause transmission to occur.

Harvest sequencing: harvest clean/low-risk fields during the first harvest sequence, infected or suspicious areas during the final harvest sequence, disinfect harvest containers between loads.

Pruning should be minimized when it is wet (virus spread is effortless when the hands of workers are wet or dirty).

5) Greenhouse-specific tips

Manage human traffic: restrict visitors and demand entry measures (shoe disinfection, hand sanitizers).

Wear protective items and compartment change/clean.

Insect screens & ventilation are beneficial to the general plant health (but ToMV is not insect-borne).

Disinfect common electrical/mechanical equipment and door handles in greenhouses.

6) Treatment of seeds and seedlings (notes and warning)

Other growers adhere to seed health measures (certified seed, seed testing, or approved seed treatment). Hot-water treatments and seed treatments are occasionally suggested to make use of tobamoviruses, which may spoil seed viability when performed improperly.

Advice: take the advice of your seed supplier and the national extension protocols; avoid trying new heat treatments unless there is local advice to the contrary.

7) Strategies over the long term and record keeping.

Record seed lots, supplier certificates, field history, workforce movements and disease detection. Records will assist in determining the source of infection and avoiding similar occurrences.

Periodically test irrigation water and greenhouse surfaces in case of unexplainable symptoms.

Plant resistant variety and change resistant variety as new resistant cultivars are introduced by seed companies.

8) When to involve experts

When the infection becomes a wide spread, contact your local agricultural extension, plant pathology lab or certified crop consultant to:

Confirmation testing (ELISA /PCR)

Certain suggestions regarding resistant varieties in your area.

Regionalized measures of containment and disposal.

Do-not-resuscitate (field/greenhouse) practical disinfectant quick-reference.

Tools: 1:9 Pty water bleach (fresh daily), soak 1-2 min, or wipe with 70% ethanol.

Hands: Wash with soap and water or 70 percent ethanol gel often.

Surface/equipment: follow label of manufacturer of commercial virucide; use bleach adhere to longer contact time (5-10 minutes) and rinse equipment (to prevent corrosion) which is metal.

Noteworthy: buys fresh bleach each day; do not combine bleach with detergents/acidic cleaners.
 

Giroas

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Joined
Jan 20, 2025
Messages
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  • First post
Quick summary (TL;DR)

Prevent first: certified virus-free seed/seedlings and resistant varieties should be used where possible.

Hygiene prevails: disinfect hands, equipment, poles, and surfaces between contacts. Limit human movement.

Watch and patrol: examine habitually; eradicate and destroy infected vegetation on the spot.

Do not become complacent: ToMV is not transmitted through insects (mostly by mechanical/seed), therefore, consider sanitation and seed well-being instead of insecticides.

Get testing: make sure that putative infections are tested with ELISA/PCR before decisions on large-scale removals are made.

1) Prevention (most important)

Purchase certified seed and seedlings free of virus.

Transmission of seeds may take place and therefore begin with seed that is certified to be free of tobamoviruses or get seedlings that have been tested in certified nurseries.

Use resistant varieties wherever possible.

A variety of tomatoes available today contain genes that are resistant (ask your local seed supplier/extension what varieties have ToMV resistance). One of the most useful and the easiest actions is the use of resistant cultivars.

Hygee in nursery / handling of seedlings.

Keep housing of seedlings clean, do not touch plants when they are not necessary and no incoming trays should mix with production space before being checked.

Quarantine new plants.

Isolate fresh transplantation one week and examine and then introduce the transplantation to the primary crop.

2) Environmental controls (green house and field) sanitation and cultural.

Wipe down the tools and surfaces.

Wipe pruners, knives, stakes, trays and table surfaces; between plant/rows with a fresh disinfectant solution. Effective options:

Household bleach (sodium hypochlorite) dilution containing a 1:910 ratio of household bleach to water (get fresh each day) to be used in tools. Prepare/immerse equipment 1-2 minutes; dry surface and allow contact to take place some minutes.

Isopropyl ethanol 70% is fast in working with small tools and hands (short contact time).

Business virucidal disinfectants (adhere to label directions).

Practical rule: disinfect movement between plots, touching symptomatic plants, and at the beginning/end of every working shift.

Hygiene of workers and movement control.

Educate train workers to wash or disinfect hands and gloves.

Sharing Teams Sharing Teams Place one team in each block of the greenhouse, or each row in the field.

Gloves: Disposable or use another block of gloves.

Tools & equipment management.

Assign equipment to blocks where feasible.

Do not share stakes, clips, harvest bins or scissors without disinfection.

Wipe off stakes, trellises, harvest containers.

Equipment are a common source of contamination.

Eradicate weed hosts and volunteer vegetation.

The virus can be trapped by solanaceous weeds (e.g., nightshades) and volunteer tomatoes plants - eliminate immediately.

Fallow intervals and crop rotation.

Plant non-host crops at least once in the growing period and rake up all plant debris at the end of the growing period.

Properly dispose and clean up crop debris.

Infected plant material should not be composted in an accessible pile of compost (except in a well-managed compost system of high temperature that is known to reliably kill viruses). Best practice: burn or inter deep-bury waste product off-site.

3) Surveillance, diagnosing and reaction.

Frequent scouting.

Check plants once in a week (more frequently in seedlings and young plants). Search mosaic on leaves, distortion, stunting or strange fruit symptoms.

Confirm with lab tests.

ELISA or PCR before major responses should be confirmed with Agricultural extension laboratory or plant disease diagnostic clinic on suspected ToMV.

Destroy plants that are rogue and destroy.

After confirmed or through strong suspicion, pull out symptomatic plants, bag them and destroy (burn/deep bury). Once removed, sanitize around the equipment and instruments and keep an eye on nearby plants.

Traceback & containment.

Surveillance of nearby blocks and recent employees in case of any spreading; check more often and think about temporary geographical isolation.

4) Field-specific tips

Precautions should be taken when handling plants, as mechanical injury may cause transmission to occur.

Harvest sequencing: harvest clean/low-risk fields during the first harvest sequence, infected or suspicious areas during the final harvest sequence, disinfect harvest containers between loads.

Pruning should be minimized when it is wet (virus spread is effortless when the hands of workers are wet or dirty).

5) Greenhouse-specific tips

Manage human traffic: restrict visitors and demand entry measures (shoe disinfection, hand sanitizers).

Wear protective items and compartment change/clean.

Insect screens & ventilation are beneficial to the general plant health (but ToMV is not insect-borne).

Disinfect common electrical/mechanical equipment and door handles in greenhouses.

6) Treatment of seeds and seedlings (notes and warning)

Other growers adhere to seed health measures (certified seed, seed testing, or approved seed treatment). Hot-water treatments and seed treatments are occasionally suggested to make use of tobamoviruses, which may spoil seed viability when performed improperly.

Advice: take the advice of your seed supplier and the national extension protocols; avoid trying new heat treatments unless there is local advice to the contrary.

7) Strategies over the long term and record keeping.

Record seed lots, supplier certificates, field history, workforce movements and disease detection. Records will assist in determining the source of infection and avoiding similar occurrences.

Periodically test irrigation water and greenhouse surfaces in case of unexplainable symptoms.

Plant resistant variety and change resistant variety as new resistant cultivars are introduced by seed companies.

8) When to involve experts

When the infection becomes a wide spread, contact your local agricultural extension, plant pathology lab or certified crop consultant to:

Confirmation testing (ELISA /PCR)

Certain suggestions regarding resistant varieties in your area.

Regionalized measures of containment and disposal.

Do-not-resuscitate (field/greenhouse) practical disinfectant quick-reference.

Tools: 1:9 Pty water bleach (fresh daily), soak 1-2 min, or wipe with 70% ethanol.

Hands: Wash with soap and water or 70 percent ethanol gel often.

Surface/equipment: follow label of manufacturer of commercial virucide; use bleach adhere to longer contact time (5-10 minutes) and rinse equipment (to prevent corrosion) which is metal.

Noteworthy: buys fresh bleach each day; do not combine bleach with detergents/acidic cleaners.
Can rigorous hygiene, certified seed use, and AI-assisted surveillance truly make Tomato Mosaic Virus a preventable disease in modern tomato production — or will human error and environmental persistence keep ToMV a recurring threat despite best practices?
 
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