Strategic planning for the Florida citrus industry
An edition of Strategic planning for the Florida citrus industry (2010)
addressing citrus greening disease
By National Research Council (U.S.). Committee on the Strategic Planning for the Florida Citrus Industry: Addressing Citrus Greening Disease (Huanglongbing)
Publish Date
2010
Publisher
National Academies Press
Language
eng
Pages
309
Description:
"Citrus greening, a disease that reduces yield, compromises the flavor, color, and size of citrus fruit and eventually kills the citrus tree, is now present in all 34 Floridian citrus-producing counties. Caused by an insect-spread bacterial infection, the disease reduced citrus production in 2008 by several percent and continues to spread, threatening the existence of Florida's $9.3 billion citrus industry. A successful citrus greening response will focus on earlier detection of diseased trees, so that these sources of new infections can be removed more quickly, and on new methods to control the insects that carry the bacteria. In the longer-term, technologies such as genomics could be used to develop new citrus strains that are resistant to both the bacteria and the insect."--Publisher's description.
subjects: Citrus, Citrus fruits, Citrus fruit industry, Coloring, Diseases and pests, Herbicides, Industries, florida, Greening disease
Places: Florida