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PRESS RELEASE
Contact: Amanda Aranowski
American Phytopathological Society
Phone: +1.651.454.7250
Web: www.apsnet.org
E-mail: aaranowski@scisoc.org
Plant Pathologists: Quick Identification Needed to Save Florida’s Citrus
Industry from Devastating Disease
St. Paul, Minn. (September 14, 2005) – The recent discovery of citrus
greening (huanglongbing) in samples collected from trees in South Florida poses
a definite threat to Florida’s $9 billion commercial citrus industry. Proper
identification and eradication methods are needed to reduce the amount of crop
loss caused by this disease, say plant pathologists with The American
Phytopathological Society (APS).
Citrus greening is a bacterial disease that affects the phloem system of citrus
plants causing the infected trees to yellow, decline, and possibly die within a
few years. The bacterium is spread by an insect, the citrus psyllid.
“Although there is no cure for citrus greening, it is vital that plant
pathologists work with growers to quickly identify the disease and its insect
hosts,” said Ronald Brlansky, professor and plant pathologist with the
University of Florida, CREC, Lake Alfred, FL. “Finding the extent of the disease
and the removal of infected trees will reduce the damage done by this disease,”
he said. Plant pathologists have been surveying and testing for citrus greening
since the psyllids were found in the U.S. in the late 1990s.
Citrus greening infects all types of citrus species. The name “huanglongbing”
means “yellow dragon” which is descriptive of the yellow sectors of infected
trees. The symptoms of citrus greening usually include a blotchy mottle and leaf
yellowing that spreads throughout the tree with lopsided fruit that fail to
color properly.
Citrus greening has seriously affected citrus production in Asia, Africa, the
Indian subcontinent and the Arabian Peninsula, and was recently discovered in
Brazil.
The American Phytopathological Society (APS) is a non-profit, professional
scientific organization. The research of the organization’s 5,000 worldwide
members advances the understanding of the science of plant pathology and its
application to plant health.
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