TY - BOOK ID - 136701745 TI - Plant Virus Emergence AU - Goodin, Michael AU - Verchot, Jeanmarie PY - 2021 PB - Basel, Switzerland MDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute DB - UniCat KW - sugar beet KW - rhizomania KW - RNAseq KW - virus KW - necrovirus KW - helper virus KW - Aphis gossypii KW - Cucumis melo KW - cucurbit viruses KW - disease progress curve KW - insect trapping KW - logistic model KW - Spearman correlation KW - temporal dynamics KW - Bunyavirale KW - RNA virus KW - emerging virus KW - virus evolution KW - plant virus KW - cophylogeny KW - hallmark genes KW - common bean KW - Phaseolus vulgaris KW - cytorhabdovirus KW - whitefly KW - Bemisia tabaci KW - vector KW - virus transmission KW - ToTV KW - emerging disease KW - prevalence KW - whole-genome sequencing KW - phylogeny KW - tomato torrado virus KW - sGFP KW - plant pathology KW - infectious clone KW - plant-virus interaction KW - pandemics KW - epidemics KW - global KW - disease KW - threat KW - food insecurity KW - crop losses KW - crop failure KW - indigenous viruses KW - introduced crops KW - new encounter KW - spillover KW - developing countries KW - domestication centers KW - sub–Saharan Africa KW - Potyviruses KW - whole genome sequencing KW - epidemiology KW - virus resistance KW - virus host interactions KW - plant viruses KW - viral vectors KW - plant diseases KW - virus spread KW - biopharming KW - vaccines KW - viruses KW - Nicotiana benthamiana KW - COVID-19 KW - plant-based biologics production KW - n/a KW - sub-Saharan Africa UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:136701745 AB - This compilation of articles elaborates on plant virus diseases that are among the most recent epidemiological concerns. The chapters explore several paradigms in plant virus epidemiology, outbreaks, epidemics, and pandemics paralleling zoonotic viruses and that can be consequential to global food security. There is evidence that the local, regional, national, and global trade of agricultural products has aided the global dispersal of plant virus diseases. Expanding farmlands into pristine natural areas has created opportunities for viruses in native landscapes to invade crops, while the movement of food and food products disseminates viruses, creating epidemics or pandemics. Moreover, plant virus outbreaks not only directly impact food supply, but also incidentally affect human health. ER -