THURSDAY, March 28, 2024
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Yellow dragon reaches Mediterranean, sparking fears for future of citrus fruit

Yellow dragon reaches Mediterranean, sparking fears for future of citrus fruit

Could we soon be forced to do without a glass of orange juice or a slice of grapefruit at breakfast? The answer is unfortunately yes.

After decimating orange groves in Florida and trees in California and Brazil, citrus greening disease now threatens the key producing region of the Mediterranean, according to researchers.
The disease “has spread since the mid-2000s with a phenomenal speed and impact”, says Eric Imbert of CIRAD, an agricultural research centre based in the French city of Montpellier.
The only citrus producing region as yet unafflicted, “the Mediterranean can’t remain untouched by citrus greening disease”, the researcher added.
Imbert said one species of the insect which spreads the disease has already been found on the Arabian peninsula.
The disease emerged in the first half of the last century in Asia, where it is called yellow dragon disease by the Chinese. It is spread by small insects called plant lice or psyllids which jump from tree to tree to suck the sap. When they do they introduce the bacteria which ends up blocking the channels along which the sap flows.
As the bacteria chokes off the flow of nutrients the leaves turn yellow, the fruit is deformed, and eventually the tree dies.
The African psyllid, which spreads a less virulent form of the disease, has already been detected in northern Spain and in Portugal, where trees were rapidly uprooted to prevent any further spread.
    
‘Screaming in a desert’ 
    “While not wanting to panic ... if we don’t do anything in terms of prevention, we could end up suffering a major catastrophe, with prices doubling or tripling,” says Imbert.
What happened in Florida proves he may well be right.
The Sunshine State saw its orange production tumble by 60 per cent from 2005 to 2017. 
And as production costs soared, the wholesale price of concentrated orange juice more than doubled to $2,500 (Bt79,000) per tonne.
“We are not immune from a phenomenon of similar magnitude on the Mediterranean fresh citrus market,” Imbert says.
According to the trade magazine FruitTrop, just over one fifth of the oranges, clementines and lemons consumed in the world come from the Mediterranean region. It accounts for 70 per cent of the world’s exports of citrus fruits.
“Researchers hit the alarm button long ago,” explains Imbert, trying to get the attention of European authorities in particular. “But we have the impression we are screaming in a desert.”
    Countries around the world are trying different methods to combat the spread of citrus greening disease.
Brazil, a major exporter of orange juice, has relied heavily on pesticides.
In California, farmers have gone with an expensive option – uprooting their sick trees and replanting.
Farmers in Florida were only able to use limited amounts of pesticide as their groves are located close to residential areas. 
Moreover, their orange groves were already weak after being ravaged by several hurricanes, which meant the trees succumbed to the disease even more quickly.
Should lice carrying the virulent strain of citrus greening disease arrive in the Mediterranean region, experts expect it to spread rapidly, as it will also be difficult to use pesticides extensively.
“There are lots of small farms surrounded by residential areas,” Imbert says.
Rushing to get ahead of the game, researchers are trying various approaches to combat the disease.
With the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe already infested, French researchers have gained valuable experience.
“Today Guadeloupe has to import limes for ti’punch as over several years it has lost nearly all of its citrus trees,” says Yann Froelicher, a researcher at the INRA national agricultural research institute, referring to a rum-based drink popular in the Caribbean.

‘No miracle solution’ 
“It was incredibly damaging as there were family-owned groves everywhere and everyone had an orange tree in their garden.”
The researchers suspect nurseries were the reason the disease spread so quickly as seedlings infected in greenhouses were distributed across the island.     The response has been to ship in seeds from a repository that INRA runs on the Mediterranean island of Corsica which has a collection of some 10,000 citrus varieties.
Once on Guadeloupe they are grown in special greenhouses that are made insect proof before being sold to growers. A type of small wasp that attacks the lice that spread the disease has also been released.
But studying the bacteria to directly combat citrus greening disease has proved hard because “you can’t cultivate it in the laboratory”, says Raphael Morillon, a researcher at CIRAD in Guadeloupe. Researchers meet every two years in Orlando, Florida to review their efforts.
“The Americans boast of having solutions, but last year everyone was guarded, no one speaks of a miracle solution,” says Morillon.
So far only France’s Indian Ocean island Reunion seems to have found a way to keep the disease at bay: replanting at higher altitudes where the lice haven’t yet followed.

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