On 31st January I found a small clump of woronowii that showed the symptoms of a virus, lighter-coloured streaks on the leaves. I took a photo:
This was disappointing but the snowdrops were not precious so I did not feel too bad about digging-up the clump and disposing of it. In the past I have found and removed the odd virused bulb and last year I had one pot of quite a precious snowdrop where all the bulbs (10 or so) were heavily virused despite having no notable symptoms the previous year.
Now skip forward to 4th March, the snow had cleared, it was reasonably warm and I was able to get back into the garden. I found another small clump of woronowii showing similar symptoms.
Perhaps the marks are not quite as obvious as in the first instance but these are right by the path and
I am sure (99%) that there were no visible symptoms on 31st January when I found the first affected clump. Worse still I went on to find a whole area nearby, an overcrowded drift of plicatus covering about 2 sq. metres in area, where all the bulbs were similarly virused. So I spent an unhappy afternoon digging them up. I cannot guarantee that I looked closely at these in January but surely I would have noticed (the affected clump I found was nearby)?
So the horror is that suddenly I seem to have quite a major problem. Hopefully I caught it in time this year and it will not spread and hopefully the bulbs I have in pots, which is most of them, have been spared. But what is the incubation period for a bulb virus like this. Am I observing bulbs that were infected last year (or earlier)? What causes the symptoms to manifest, or not? Could our recent spell of very cold weather and snow have made the symptoms more obvious? Could some bulbs be "carriers" and have the virus without manifesting symptoms? Is the virus spread above or below ground? Why is it almost always the entire clump that is affected rather than random bulbs?
Hopefully there will be some knowledgeable people here who can help me answer some of these questions.