Asian citrus psyllid found in Tulare County

FRESNO (AP) — A tiny pest capa­ble of car­ry­ing and spread­ing a dis­ease deadly to cit­rus trees has been found in the heart of California’s cit­rus belt, agri­cul­ture offi­cials said Monday.

An Asian cit­rus psyl­lid was dis­cov­ered in a com­mer­cial cit­rus orchard near Strath­more, south­east of Visalia, Tulare County Agri­cul­tural Com­mis­sioner Mar­i­lyn Kinoshita said.

The insect was iden­ti­fied Fri­day on a trap pulled from a tree by work­ers for the Cal­i­for­nia Depart­ment of Food and Agri­cul­ture, she said.

The psyl­lid was not in suit­able con­di­tion to be tested for the bac­te­ria that causes the dis­ease, Cal­i­for­nia Depart­ment of Food and Agri­cul­ture spokesman Steve Lyle said.

Trees in the area did not show any signs of the dis­ease, and the depart­ment intends to deploy addi­tional traps and sur­vey other nearby cit­rus trees, he said.

It’s only the sec­ond psyl­lid found in the San Joaquin Val­ley. The first was dis­cov­ered in Feb­ru­ary in Tulare County, about four miles away. It also was not suit­able for testing.

Many other psyl­lids have been found in South­ern California.

Thus far, none of the psyl­lids have tested pos­i­tive for the deadly bac­te­ria known by its Chi­nese name Huan­g­long­bing and also called cit­rus greening.

The state con­sid­ers test­ing every psyl­lid found in a trap but many are too dry — so the state does not know if those psyl­lids car­ried Huan­g­long­bing, Lyle said.

The dis­ease has dec­i­mated the cit­rus sec­tor in Florida and other parts of the world, but it hasn’t touched California’s $1.8 bil­lion industry.

It’s a cause for alarm, but we can’t over­re­act just yet,” said Joel Nel­son, pres­i­dent of Cal­i­for­nia Cit­rus Mutual, a non­profit group rep­re­sent­ing cit­rus farm­ers. “We hope it’s an iso­lated find, a hitch­hiker. We’re sit­ting and hold­ing our breaths.”

There are no known pes­ti­cides or other meth­ods to com­bat the dis­ease. It can only be elim­i­nated by find­ing and elim­i­nat­ing the insect carrier.

Cal­i­for­nia grow­ers have taxed them­selves to fund a psyl­lid trap­ping pro­gram that aims to elim­i­nate the bac­te­ria car­rier before it can spread the dis­ease, Nel­son said.

Huan­g­long­bing is hard to detect visu­ally because the bac­te­ria can be present in a tree for a year or longer before symp­toms can be spot­ted. Once infected, a tree dies within five years. Typ­i­cally, a healthy cit­rus tree can be pro­duc­tive for decades.

The psyl­lid was first detected in South­ern Cal­i­for­nia in 2008 and is known to exist in the region mostly in orna­men­tal or back­yard trees.

Since then, the state has recorded nearly 43,000 reports of psyl­lid detec­tion — some with mul­ti­ple insects — in South­ern Cal­i­for­nia, all with­out the bac­te­ria, Lyle said.

One tree infected with the dis­ease was dis­cov­ered in the Hacienda Heights area of Los Ange­les County — but sci­en­tists found no infected psyllids.

Tulare County has 119,000 acres of cit­rus, 61 cit­rus pack­ing sheds and four juice plants.