
Quick facts
Common name - Canna viruses
Scientific name - Various
Plants affected - Canna spp.
Main symptoms - Stunted growth, distortion, streaked and mottled leaves
Caused by - Viruses
Timing - Mid-spring to late autumn
Peat-free success with sarracenias
Infections by one or more of Canna yellow mottle virus (CaYMV), Bean yellow mosaic virus (BYMV) and Canna yellow streak virus (CaYSV) cause a range of symptoms in cannas including stunting, distortion and streaking in the leaves and colour ‘breaks’ in the flowers.
CaYMV infects only cannas, but BYMV infects a wide range of plants, including beans, peas, freesias and gladioli. CaYSV is a relatively new virus, found for the first time in the UK in 2007. In infected plants, symptoms on newly-infected leaves can be expected whenever the plants are growing from mid spring until late autumn.
For more on how these viruses are transmitted, see the Biology section below.
Cultivation of sarracenias
You may see the following symptoms:
- CaYMV causes streaks of pale tissue between the leaf veins. These later die, resulting in streaks of dead brown tissue
- BYMV causes a yellow mottling of the leaves
- CaYSV causes leaf-streaking similar to CaYMV
- Infections can result in stunted plants with distorted leaves
- ‘Breaks’ (white streaks) may occur in the flowers
When more than one virus is present in the same plant the symptoms may be more severe.
Further research into peat-free compost for sarracenias
Non-chemical control
- Take care to buy healthy plants, avoiding any which are stunted or have suspicious colour patterns on leaves (though note that some cultivars have highly leaves and it is very difficult to tell if these are infected without specialist tests)
- Do not propagate from any plant suspected of having virus infection, but destroy it before it can act as a source of infection for others
Chemical control
There are no chemical controls for virus infections. It is not practical to protect plants from the aphid vectors by using insecticides.