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Research Project: IPM TECHNOLOGIES FOR INSECT PESTS OF ORCHARD CROPS

Location: Subtropical Insects and Horticulture Research

Title: Survival of adult Asian citrus pysllid on harvested citrus fruit and leaves

Authors

Submitted to: Florida Entomologist
Publication Type: Peer Reviewed Journal
Publication Acceptance Date: September 23, 2011
Publication Date: December 1, 2011
Citation: Hall, D.G., Mccollum, T.G. 2011. Survival of adult Asian citrus pysllid on harvested citrus fruit and leaves. Florida Entomologist. 94:1094-1096.

Interpretive Summary: The Asian citrus psyllid is an important citrus pest because it transmits bacteria responsible for citrus greening disease. Both the psyllid and disease have been introduced into Florida. The psyllid has spread to other citrus production areas in the U.S. including Texas. Pertinent to this report is that the psyllid is invading California and Arizona, but most of the citrus in these states is currently free of the psyllid due to concerted eradication efforts. Citrus groves in these two states where the psyllid has been found are quarantined to assist in preventing the spread of the psyllid with harvested fruit trucked to areas where the psyllid has not been found. In Florida, adult psyllids have been reported with fruit transported after harvest. However, no information was available regarding psyllid survival on harvested fruit, which could be valuable in determining if or when fruit from an infested grove might safely be moved after harvest. Prompted by these regulatory concerns, survival of adults was investigated on harvested fruit and leaves. We found that adult psyllids can survive for a number of days without food; that they survive longer on harvested fruit; and that they survive even longer if leaves are present either alone or attached to stems. Survival of adult psyllids was longest a stem with leaves was attached to a fruit.

Technical Abstract: Prompted by regulatory concerns of Asian citrus psyllid accidentally being transported from areas infested by the psyllid to areas not infested, survival of adults was investigated on harvested fruit and leaves. Adults lived a maximum of 4 or 5 days in the absence of plant material but for 10 or 11 days on fruit. Survival increased when adults were confined to individual fruit with an attached stem of leaves, although there were survival differences among four citrus cultivars studied – adults lived a maximum of about 18, 21, 25 or 29 days on fruit from Temple orange, grapefruit, Murcott, or sweet orange trees when a stem with leaves remained attached to a fruit. Survival of adults on detached stems without leaves was similar to survival in the absence of food. Adults survived longer on detached stems with leaves or on detached leaves – adults lived a maximum of about 7 or 8 days when confined on leaves from Murcott or Temple trees compared to a maximum of more than 10 days on leaves from grapefruit or sweet orange trees.

   

 
Project Team
Lapointe, Stephen
Hall, David
Hunter, Wayne
Shatters, Robert - Bob
Patt, Joseph - Joe
 
Publications
   Publications
 
Related National Programs
  Crop Protection & Quarantine (304)
 
Related Projects
   REPELLENTS AND ATTRACTANTS FOR ASIAN CITRUS PSYLLID
   ASIAN CITRUS PSYLLID ATTRACTANTS AND REPELLENTS
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   TARGETING THE ASIAN CITRUS PSYLLID (ASCP) FEEDING MECHANSIM AS A MEANS OF BLOCKING PSYLLLID FEEDING ON CITRUS
   DEEP SEQUENCING OF DIAPHORINA CITRI
   DEVELOPMENT OF CDNA MICROARRAYS FOR GENE EXPRESSION RESEARCH IN FLORICULTURAL CROPS
   COMBINATORIAL LIBRARY SCREENING FOR PSYLLID DISRUPTION MOLECULES
   ATTRACT AND KILL TECHNOLOGY TO CONTROL CITRUS LEAFMINER IN CITRUS NURSERIES AND ORCHARDS
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   COLLABORATIVE RESEARCH ON THE CITRUS LEAFMINER, PHYLLOCNISTIS CITRELLA
   SEMIOCHEMICAL-BASED TECHNOLOGY FOR CONTROL OF CITRUS PESTS
   DEVELOPMENT OF NOVEL INSECT CONTROL STRATEGIES BASED ON RNAI AND INSECT DETERRENT PROTEINS FOR INSECT PESTS OF CITRUS
   VIRUS OF HEMIPTERANS: LEAFHOPPERS AND PSYLLIDS
   PATHOGENS OF INVASIVE INSECTS
   SEMIOCHEMICALS FOR CONTROL OF CITRUS LEAFMINER AND CITRUS CANKER DISEASE WITH APPLICATION FOR CONTROL OF ASIAN CITRUS PSYLLID AND HLB
   INTERDISCIPLINARY APPROACHES TO ADVANCE CITRUS DISEASE RESEARCH & PRODUCT DVLPMT TO ENSURE THE SUSTAINABILITY OF THE NATL CITRUS INDUSTRY
   DEVELOPING A PHLOEM PENETRATION/ANTIMICROBIAL TREATMENT TO REDUCE/ELIMATE CANDIDATUS LIBERIBACTER FROM EXISTING CITRUS TREES
   DETERMINATION OF ATTRACTIVE HOST PLANT VOLATILES AND SEX PHEROMONES OF ASIAN CITRUS PSYLLID USING EAGS AND GC-EAD
   APPLICATION OF AN AGGREGATION PHEROMONE FOR MANAGEMENT OF THE DIAPREPES ROOT WEEVIL
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Last Modified: 05/19/2013
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