dcsimg

Fmicb-08-01337-g002

Image of Baculovirus

Description:

Description: English: Baculovirus transmission routes, mode of infection and dispersal pathways in the environment. After larvae ingest OBs while feeding on contaminated foliage a portion of the infected individuals develop lethal disease and release OBs onto the host plant where they can be transmitted to a susceptible host (red arrow). OBs on foliage are also washed by rainfall into the soil, from which they can be transported back to plants by biotic and abiotic factors (black arrows). Alternatively, insects that consume OBs but survive may continue to develop, pupate and emerge as covertly infected adults (blue arrows). These adults can disperse before laying eggs and passing the infection to their offspring. Vertical transmission can be sustain over several generations until some elicitor or stress factor triggers (orange arrow) the covert infection into lethal disease which returns to the horizontal transmission cycle (red arrows). Date: 17 July 2017. Source: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01337/full. Author: Trevor Williams, Cristina Virto, Rosa Murillo, and Primitivo Caballero.

Included On The Following Pages:

This image is not featured in any collections.

Source Information

license
cc-by-3.0
copyright
Trevor Williams, Cristina Virto, Rosa Murillo, and Primitivo Caballero
creator
Trevor Williams, Cristina Virto, Rosa Murillo, and Primitivo Caballero
source
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fmicb.2017.01337/full
original
original media file
visit source
partner site
Wikimedia Commons
ID
b6986cba583965fbcdad08be1ee716a7