- Widespread. In Oceania only from Wallis and Futuna. Mostly, confined to cassava; some weeds are hosts.
- Diseases cause yellowing of leaves, bunching of shoots - growth of normally dormant buds - sometimes vascular tissue discolouration, occasionally leaf mosaics, rough skin, cracking, woodiness of storage roots. Yield and starch losses impact farmers and processors. Examples include:
- Cassava frogskin (South America). Symptoms mainly on storage roots: thin, woody, deep cracks, sometimes forming rings around roots.
- X-disease (Brazil). Yellow, distorted leaves; stunting; witches’ broom symptoms.
- Witches’ broom (Thailand, Vietnam). Symptoms of witches’ broom; browning of vascular tissues; poor storage root development.
- Unnamed (Uganda). Yellowish leaves; slight stunting.
- Unnamed (Cote d’Ivoire). Yellowing of leaves and mosaic patterns. Similar phytoplasma to St Paul Wilt Disease of coconut.
- Unnamed (Wallis and Futuna). Yellowing and bunching of shoots.
- Spread: cuttings for propagation; possibly, phloem-feeding insects (leafhoppers and planthoppers).
- Biosecurity: risk from unofficial introduction of diseased cuttings for propagation. Official movement of germplasm should follow the FAO/IPBGR Technical Guidelines.
- Biocontrol: none.
- Cultural control: take cuttings from apparently healthy plants; rogue plants with symptoms; avoid planting next to cassava with disease.
- Chemical control: not a method to use, as little known about spread by insects.