Integrated Pest Management


Collaborative Research Support Program (IPM CRSP)

 Partners Access

IPM Success Stories

Publications

Meetings & Workshops

Photo Gallery

IPM Resources

Search IPM Website



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

 

 IPM CRSP > Success Stories > IPM Researcher Helps with Solution to Hot Pepper Virus in Jamaica

IPM Success Story:

IPM Researcher Helps with Solution to

Hot Pepper Virus in Jamaica

It has been called “the king of Capsicums” and the “Prince of Peppers.” The scotch bonnet pepper of Jamaica is so hot that just handling the seeds requires wearing gloves to prevent being burned. This pungency has made the peppers highly prized. Aficionados claim that the peppers have a “smoky-fruity” flavor—that is, if you can get beyond the burning sensation! In Jamaica, scotch bonnet peppers are the most profitable of any export crop and provide employment and income for 3,000 people.


 

Yet, scotch peppers could be much more profitable were it not for a highly destructive virus that attacks 70 percent of the crop. Under the IPM CRSP program, Virginia Tech plant pathologist Sue Tolin has researched the Tobacco Etch Virus—the invisible culprit—for six years. She has learned that combating the pest is not an easy thing.

In addition to reducing yield, TEV deforms the peppers and mottles the leaves, making them unmarketable. The leaf mottling, or “etching” is what gives the virus its name. TEV is spread by aphids, and aphids appear in great numbers after rains. Weeds increase, and aphids come to feed on the weeds, bringing with them the virus that then hops onto the pepper plants.

The traditional method of treating the virus was to spray it with insecticides, which besides having a negative effect on the environment, did not stop the problem.

What Tolin found was that the solution lies in a combination of methods. Farmers need to protect seedlings with aphid-impermeable netting before transplanting; they need to use stylet oil—a biodegradable fungicide and insecticide; and they need to remove weeds within or adjacent to pepper fields, and to destroy old pepper fields that may harbor TEV.

What’s more, researchers need to share their findings; and port and packing house inspectors as well as import administrators need to understand the latest in research.

Tolin hopes that her findings will not only help with the production of healthy pepper crops in Jamaica, but will also contribute to an understanding of aphids and TEV in general. What she learns about aphids in Jamaica can be applied in the United States and in other places where peppers are grown.

Privacy Statement Sitemap Contact Us
 
  Office of International Research, Education, and Development, Virginia Tech,
Blacksburg, VA - 24061-0334