Please, discuss the method of FMV transmission. I thought that mites transmit this virus from tree to tree, and that the mites cannot survive in cold climate areas. So therefore clean trees in colder climates, stay clean. No mites. I have never seen FMV symptoms on any NYC trees. Every local tree, is clean, and productive, in fact, except for the end-of-season Rust infections, the trees are all symptom free from FMD. I'm sure other locations, like Philly, Conn. etc can claim the same story. This seems to be a problem in Southern, and warmer climates where the mites can survive. Yes, no, maybe so?
Now, if a tree already showing symptoms is "imported" into my collection of symptom-free, locally-grown trees, will the virus jump to my trees? Does the "imported" tree have to be carrying active mites in order to transmit the FMV virus to the symptom-free trees?
I've read that the cold kills off the mites, so even if a tree is sent in from a nursery, with symptoms, and with mites, and is brought into a mite-free, colder climate, the mites will be killed off after the first Winter. So you are left with a tree that has the virus, but not the infecting mites. Is this a valid assumption?
My very unscientific, conclusion is that active mites need to be present for the virus to jump to a presumably, clean, tree. So, I isolate all new trees coming into my small collection if it shows symptoms, and take precautions with tools, my hands, etc. After the first Winter, the mites, if any, I hope would be killed off by the cold. That's the theory.
None of my trees show symptoms, except one, which recently came into my collection. If this infected tree performs poorly, it's going to be removed. I'm no Florence Nightingale for figs.
Frank
EDIT: For those who want and grow the more exotic and rarer varieties, I think living with infected plants is a fact of life, and you will have to find ways to deal with the virus.