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Grow-Bags-Solutions
栽培袋
野菜やソフトフルーツの栽培に最適な最先端の栽培袋。
Growbags for berries (strawberries)
ベリー栽培用バッグ
ペレミックス栽培バッグでイチゴ栽培を簡単に
Growbags for vegetables
野菜栽培バッグ
ニーズに合わせた様々なコイヤーミックスで野菜栽培を強化
Growbagss-with-filters
ピュアテック
ピュアテック・ココワールで効率を最大化
GROWSLABS
グロースラブ
お客様のニーズに合ったスラブソリューション
fit to pot
鍋にぴったり
カスタマイズ可能なPelemixポットフィットココ基材ソリューション
Open-Tops---product-image
オープントップ
様々な作物に対する効率的でオーダーメイドのソリューション
Loose - Blend
ルーズ/ブレンド
カスタムブレンドとルース基材で卓越性を実現
bales-main
レンガ/ブロック/俵
培地を再定義するコアー製品のセレクション。
Grow-Cubes
グロウ・キューブ
作物のニーズに合わせた完璧なバランス。

ToBRFV: Persistent Inoculum or Efficient Crisis Management?

In modern agronomy, we no longer analyze Tomato Brown Rugose Fruit Virus (ToBRFV) solely in terms of its pathogenicity, but rather in terms of the resilience of the cropping system itself. The question we must ask is not whether the virus will arrive, but what response capacity our infrastructure will have when it does.

The vulnerability of the modern greenhouse

ToBRFV has characteristics that make it a particularly insidious threat to protected crop production. Its mechanical transmission makes it extremely contagious: any direct or indirect physical contact can trigger an outbreak. The virus enters the greenhouse through multiple vectors: technical staff, tools, infected plant material, and even contaminated substrate particles attached to footwear or work clothing.

Once established, ToBRFV demonstrates exceptional stability, remaining viable for months on inert surfaces and dried plant material. This persistence turns every routine crop operation into a potential exponential dispersal event.

The difference between maintaining profitability and facing total seasonal collapse lies in the system’s sanitation capacity:

  1. Soil: The inoculum reservoir

In traditional cultivation, soil acts as a biological “memory.” The virus persists not only on the surface but also deep within lignified root residues and the soil structure itself. As infected roots decompose, they gradually release viral particles that remain viable for extended periods, creating reinfection foci that may activate in subsequent cycles.

Chemical or thermal disinfection rarely achieves 100% effectiveness, especially in deeper layers.

Risk: Latent reinfestation. In soil, the virus is not a visitor; it is a nearly permanent tenant inherited cycle after cycle.

  1. Hydroponics (Coco Coir): The biological firewall

In the face of soil uncertainty, coconut coir substrate offers complete technical control. When an outbreak is detected, intervention is surgical in precision:

System reset: Physical removal of the infected substrate, full disinfection of the structure, and immediate restart with inert and sterile material.

The key lies in the fact that, although infected roots can also maintain the virus in coconut substrate, the fundamental difference is the ability to completely eliminate contaminated material. Each bag or container can be entirely removed, taking with it both infected roots and the medium where the virus could persist.

Advantage: The substrate acts as a sanitary barrier, allowing a radical break in the epidemiological cycle.

As our colleague Javier Cánovas Mateos, Agronomic Engineer at Pelemix, notes:“The greatest advantage of hydroponics in biosecurity against rugose virus is the ability to reset the system. In soil, the virus is a tenant; in coconut coir, it is a problem that leaves with the bag.”

Conclusion

The transition to hydroponics should not be understood solely as an optimization of water and nutrient resources. Above all, it is a risk management strategy—and your best insurance policy against persistent viruses.

Do not let ToBRFV determine the future of your crop. Standardize your biosecurity.

持続可能で成功する栽培方法に関する最新のニュースやトレンドの情報を入手する。
持続可能で成功する栽培方法に関する最新のニュースやトレンドの情報を入手する。
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