FIRST LADY GIVES READERS LOOK AT WHITE HOUSE GARDEN

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Hosta virus has no cure

Hosta virus has no cure

Question: The leaves on one of my hosta plants are curled, but they never were before. The plant came up that way this year. My other hostas dont look like that. Whats going on?

Answer: Judging from the leaf sample you provided, it looks like your plant has been infected with a virus called hosta virus X. The virus causes a variety of symptoms, one of which is a puckering of the leaves. That’s what happened with yours.

Unfortunately, there’s no treatment for an infected plant. In an Ohio State University Extension fact sheet on the topic, plant pathologist Dennis J. Lewandowski recommends removing and destroying the plant. Don’t compost it, because that could spread the disease.

If you want to plant another hosta in that spot, wait until any remaining bits of root have decomposed so there’s no residual virus in the soil, Lewandowski says. It’s OK to put another kind of plant there, because the virus affects only hostas.

The disease can be spread to other hostas when sap from an infected plant touches a fresh wound on a healthy plant — for example, when the same tool is used to divide or trim both plants. Since a plant can be diseased before it shows symptoms, the fact sheet recommends disinfecting tools regularly, ideally between hosta plants. Tools can be disinfected with a solution of one part bleach to 10 parts water.

Lewandowski’s fact sheet, HYG-3069-08, can be found at ohioline.osu.edu.

By wire sources