Causal Agent: 
Tobamovirus (Tobacco mosaic virus or TMV; Tomato mosaic virus or ToMV)
| Characteristic Symptoms: | |
|  | Affects all growth stages of the plant. | 
|  | Symptoms include mosaic on leaves with distortion of younger leaves and narrowing of leaf tips, necrosis and distortion of severely affected leaves, defoliation and stunting. | 
|  | Occasionally, wilting of stems and leaves and necrosis on fruits. | 
| Transmission and Spread: | |
|  | Both viruses are seed-borne and easily transmitted by contact or through contaminated hands, clothing, farm tools and implements. | 
|  | Other sources of the virus are infected weed species, irrigation water, tobacco products used for smoking and TMV-infected tobacco plants. | 
|  | The virus is quite stable under adverse environmental conditions and can persist in plant debris in dry soil for 2 years or in moist soil for 1 month or in root debris in fallow soil for 22 months. | 
|  | The virus can also persist in greenhouse structures for long periods of time. | 
| Management and Control: | |
|  | Use resistant varieties, if available. | 
|  | Use virus-free seeds and seedlings. | 
|  | Carefully remove and destroy infected plants as early as virus symptoms are observed to prevent/minimize spread of the virus by direct contact between plants. | 
|  | Remove weeds that may serve as hosts for the virus. | 
|  | Avoid touching the plants or dip hands in skim milk while handling plants every 5 minutes. | 
|  | Disinfect stakes, tools and implements by soaking in 10% household bleach (chlorox) for 10 minutes or in 3% TSP for 30 minutes. | 
|  | Work in unaffected areas first before working in diseased areas. | 
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