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Updated 31 Jan 2007
CANNA
VIRUS DISEASE
Most gardeners with a particular interest in cannas will
by now be well aware of
the advancement of canna virus
which was unknown not many years ago, and which is now a worldwide
epidemic. It has infected virtually all, if not all canna growers
in most countries of the world. Most private collections in many
countries are thoroughly infected, and some have been totally destroyed
by it. Many good heritage varieties have been lost, maybe for
ever.
The low point of our own involvement with canna virus disease was 2005,
when we became aware that most of the cannas we were selling were
infected, and most of the plants in our National Collection were
infected. In case this reads like a shameful admisssion, it
should be realised that, at that time, the world's major suppliers of
cannas in the Netherlands, France, the USA, Israel, Australia, were
thoroughly infected with virus disease.
It was difficult to buy a healthy canna
anywhere. Any canna rhizome or plant purchased in any garden
centre, hardware store or nursery was virtually certain to be diseased
(and we think still are). All cannas grown in municipal
planting schemes were clearly diseased (and still are). Many
canna enthusiasts had collections of cannas that were totally diseased,
and some were quite unaware of it (and some still are).
At that time we faced a difficult commercial decision. Should we
continue in
business selling diseased stock, or should we decide not to sell
diseased cannas, in which case we would have nothing to sell. We
decided that we would not knowingly sell any plants with disease, and
if this was to be the end of our
business then so be it. 8 years of work would come to nothing.
Then providence took
a hand. We managed to find from various sources a number of
varieties that appeared to be reasonably healthy. Also, a
customer
who had become a friend gave us a van load of healthy rhizomes.
So we were able to put together a catalogue of some 40 varieties which
we were reasonably confident were healthy. This was a reduction
in the over 100 varieties that we had been
selling previously, but even so it meant that we were able to continue
in business
in 2006. We have built on that new beginning for our 2007
catalogue. The cannas that we are selling in 2007 were grown from
stock that was reasonably healthy last year. We hope that
the worst of this virus crisis is behind us.
But not all growers and suppliers have decided to throw away their
diseased plants and to start again with healthy plants. Most of
the
"big
boys" and many of the "small boys" in the business are continuing to
grow and sell diseased cannas. They will say that nobody
notices that the plants/rhizomes that they buy are diseased; that they
still
get good sales, that the diseased cannas still produce a good crop of
flowers, and that not many people complain anyway. And so most of
the
commercial supplies of canna to our retail outlets continue
to be diseased.
So what is this disease that has caused all this trouble. Firstly
is should be said that most plants are susceptable to virus
diseases. Apples, bananas, strawberries, potatoes, orchids,
dahlias, lilies,
daffodils, and most other plants, even mushrooms, they can all get
virus disease. But there are strict
rules about food crops, because food is deemed to be
important. Ornamental plants like cannas are deemed to be
unimportant, and there are few restrictions on the importing and
exporting of diseased plants and rhizomes. So, diseased cannas
find their way to our retail outlets. If it was just one or two,
it wouldn't matter very much, because you could rogue out individual
diseased plants, as gardeners do with eg dahlias. With cannas it
hit hard, and it
hit everywhere. You couldn't rogue out the odd one that showed
the
disease, because they
all had it.
HERE ARE
SOME FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS (FAQ):
What do diseased cannas
look like? Some pictures are shown below. The
initial symptoms are light
green speckles on the leaves, and short light green streaks that are
parallel with the leaf veins. As the year progresses, so it gets
worse and worse, and the pale green streaks in the leaf become dead
streaks. The plant looks very diseased. By the end of the
year, all the leaves, even the
new leaves, are distorted, twisted, and streaked with dead areas.
You also
get white streaks in the flowers.
Do all diseased
cannas look the same? No. It is usually
easy to see in green varieties, more difficult in bronze. It is
very easy to see in Phasion, as short bright green streaks against a
red
background. It is very difficult to see in Pretoria - the normal
yellow stripes just look a little sandy. Sometimes it seems
to produce corrugations rather than speckles and streaks.
Can it be confused
with any other condition? The first leaf that
sprouts from a rhizome can be naff anyway - watch for the second
leaf. Red spider mite causes leaf browning which
superficially can look like virus. Root stress, due to
transplanting plants that are growing, or using poor compost can cause
leaves to have brown edges.
Can it kill cannas?
It seems to weaken them so that many don't
survive the winter.
Can all cannas get
it? Yes. No varieties are immune in spite of
what some folk say. Bronze varieties get it just as much as
green.
Can it be cured?
No, except by the scientific procedure of
meristem propagation (we have built a laboratory at our nursery with
this intention) but it is not easy.
How is it spread?
Aphids are believed to be the main
vector, even though you don't usually see aphids on cannas. I
know from my own experience that Red Spider Mite doesn't spread
it.
Can it be spread
by eg knives used for pruning?
Maybe. Don't risk it.
How do you
sterilise knives? We have a pan of continuously
boiling water. Whether it works or not we don't know.
Can it be spread
by touching a healthy canna after touching a diseased canna.
Maybe.
Can it be
maitained in the soil from one year to the next? My
personal view is no it can't.
Can cannas grow
out of it? A plant pathologist would say
no. My own view is that occasionally they can.
Can it spread from
other plants to cannas? I haven't noticed this
happening. A healthy population of cannas usually remains healthy.
Can it be spread
in seeds? Maybe not, or only a small percentage
of seeds carry it.
Can the symptoms
be masked by good growing conditions. Some people say
so. Personally I don't think so - you just need to look closely.
What is the virus
called? There are a number of viruses
that have been identified in diseased cannas: Bean Yellow Mosaic
Virus BYMV, Canna Yellow Mottle Virus CYMV.
How quickly and
how far can it spread? My own view is that it
often spreads to cannas alongside diseased cannas. It doesn't
seem too
good at jumping distances of even a few yards. Commercial growers
grow
fields of cannas all crowded together which is the ideal conditions for
it to spread.
Are the
varigations in variegated varieties caused by virus? I
think not. I had samples of Phasion and Pretoria tested, and they
were determined to not have virus disease.
How can virus
disease be identified. Virus particles can be
seen under an electron microscope. The particular type of
virus is identified by immunological tests. Not many laboratories
are able to do this.
PHOTOS
The beauty of cannas is that the foliage is perfect. It has a
beautiful shape and no blemishes at all. If a canna grows new
leaves that are already blemished as they unroll, then suspect
virus. The main symptoms, as these pictures show, are pale
green speckles and streaks. Later in the season, these pale
areas die and turn brown, and then the plant looks very sick. The
flowers also show pale speckles and streaks (we'll add some pictures of
diseased flowers soon).

Notice the pale streaks parallel to the leaf veins. A closer view
would show lots of speckles.

See the speckles and streaks.


This leaf of Phasion (Durban, Tropicanna) should be burgundy coloured,
with pink stripes.
Virus replaces the pink stripes with light green stripes.


The streaks are now beginning to turn brown.

Diseased Centenaire. The leaves now have dead areas.

Diseased Wyoming, late in the season. It is now looking
awful.

A field of diseased cannas in the Netherlands.