Causal Agent: 
Potyvirus (Chilli veinal mottle virus or ChiVMV)
| Characteristic Symptoms: | |
|  | Symptoms may vary in type and intensity depending on the virus strain, variety and time of infection. | 
|  | Mosaic and mottle develop on leaves at the early stage of infection. | 
|  | Green vein-banding and leaf distortion develop at the advance stage of infection. | 
|  | In some varieties, fruits are mottled, deformed and may show yellow or green bands. | 
|  | Plants infected at the early stage may become stunted. | 
| Transmission and Spread: | |
|  | The virus is transmitted in nature by 7 species of aphids, including Myzus persicae in a non-persistent manner (aphid can acquire the virus from infected plant for only a few seconds while feeding and then transmits the virus immediately on the next feeding). | 
|  | The virus has a limited host range (confined to solanaceous). | 
|  | Infected volunteer pepper plants in the field serve as sources of primary inoculum. | 
|  | The virus is not transmitted through seed. | 
|  | Can be transmitted mechanically and by grafting. | 
| Management and Control: | |
|  | Use resistant varieties, if available. | 
|  | Use virus-free seeds and seedlings. | 
|  | Remove infected plants as early as virus symptoms are observed to prevent/minimize spread of the virus by aphids. | 
|  | Disinfect tools, farm implements with chlorine solution before moving from diseased areas to healthy areas. | 
|  | Control/minimize aphid population by using plastic mulch, yellow sticky traps and/or use of insecticides such as azadirachtin (neem), cartap hydrochloride (e.g.  PadanⓇ, Barena 50 SP, Gemtrak®), acetamiprid (e.g. MospilanⓇ), acephate (e.g. AcetamⓇ, CompeteⓇ), chlorphenapyr (e.g. Kotetsu) or penthoate (e.g. PennantⓇ, VidexⓇ) and acephate (e.g. Compete®). | 
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