Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Iconic palms threatened by invasive disease

- By Terry Spencer

DAVIE Florida’s iconic palm trees are under attack from a fatal disease that turns them to dried crisps in months, with no chance for recovery once they become ill.

Spread by a rice-sized, planthoppi­ng insect, lethal bronzing has gone from a small infestatio­n on Florida’s Gulf Coast to a nearly statewide problem in just over a decade. Tens of thousands of palm trees have died from the bacterial disease, and the pace of its spread is increasing, adding to environmen­tal woes of a state already struggling to save its other arboreal icon, citrus trees, from two other diseases.

Florida’s official state tree — the tall, broad-leafed sabal palm — is especially susceptibl­e and Florida nurseries, businesses and homeowners are taking a financial hit as they scrap infected palms. Some preventive measures can be taken, but once infected, uprooting the tree is the only practical solution.

“Getting this disease under control is essential because it has the potential to drasticall­y modify our landscape,” said Brian Bahder, an entomologi­st who studies insectborn­e plant diseases and is a leader in the state’s lethal bronzing.

If nothing is done, Bahder said, “I don’t think all the palm trees will die, but the issue we see will get a lot worse before it gets better.”

Lethal bronzing, which experts say likely originated in Mexico, also is found in parts of Texas and throughout the Caribbean. Some worry it will migrate to California and Arizona, infecting date palms and damaging that fruit crop. The disease has already heavily damaged Jamaica’s coconut plantation­s, and Brazil is taking preventive measures to avoid invasion. battle against

Coincident­ally — but convenient­ly — lethal bronzing is attacking palms right outside Bahder’s office at the University of Florida’s agricultur­e research station near Fort Lauderdale. Some are dying, some are dead. This gives him a lab to test ideas and make presentati­ons, so he is not removing infected trees as recommende­d.

“To understand the disease, I need to watch it spread and see what it is doing,” said Bahder, an assistant professor with UF.

Lethal bronzing’s first Florida appearance came near Tampa in

2006, but it’s now found from the Keys in the south to Jacksonvil­le in the north. The disease is transmitte­d solely by the haplaxius crudus, a tiny winged insect sometimes called the American palm cixiid or, genericall­y, a treehopper. These specific treehopper­s (there are other kinds) inject the bacteria through their saliva when feasting on the sap from a palm’s leaves. Any palm cixiid that later feeds from the tree will pick up the infection and pass the bacteria to more palms.

Once inside a tree, the bacteria migrate to its base, multiplyin­g until they clog the circulator­y system — much like human arteries getting blocked by fat and cholestero­l. The blockage makes it impossible for the tree’s cells to get sufficient nutrients and sugars, starving them. As an infected tree dies, its fronds and central spear leaf transform from green to a telltale shade of bronze as it succumbs in about six months. The disease doesn’t infect humans or animals.

Genetic testing shows lethal bronzing likely originated in Mexico’s Yucatan region. Bahder’s hypothesis is that 2005s Hurricane Wilma, which tracked from the Yucatan to Florida, or a storm with a similar path carried infected treehopper­s across the gulf to Tampa. Those insects infected area palms, which infected native treehopper­s. The disease spread when winds blew infected bugs to new territorie­s or they hitched rides on vehicles. Bahder said the palm cixiid is particular­ly attracted to white cars.

To check the spread, the state agricultur­e department regularly inspects palm nurseries and certifies those found free of the disease. If infected trees are discovered, they’re destroyed and the nursery’s remaining trees are quarantine­d for at least six weeks. Calls to about a dozen palm tree farms around the state weren’t returned — Bahder said it is a problem owners don’t like to discuss publicly, fearing it will hurt business.

Eric Muecke, Tampa’s urban forestry manager, said the city has had success containing the disease by keeping its palms healthy and surroundin­g more susceptibl­e palm varieties with trees that don’t attract the bacteria-spreading bugs.

“It’s not like it marches through a tree population — you don’t see one dead tree after another,” Muecke said. “It hops around; it’s pretty sporadic.”

Brent Gaffney, a Gainesvill­e landscaper, said Bahder’s research is the state’s best hope for containing the disease, but only if he gets enough funding. Studies are underway on whether massive doses of antibiotic­s can save trees in the infection’s early stages.

After infected trees are removed, nearby palms need preventive antibiotic injections to halt the spread. Each injection costs $50 and loses effectiven­ess after three months: that makes injections before the disease is present too costly for most homeowners, businesses and municipal government­s, Bahder said. Only high-end resorts that use mature palms to enhance ambience might consider injecting trees without a nearby infection, he said.

Lethal bronzing is sometimes called “Texas Phoenix palm decline” because it appeared in that state in the late 1970s, killing trees in the Rio Grande Valley around Brownsvill­e. That state’s agricultur­e department says outbreaks today are infrequent and isolated. But Bahder said global warming is widening the threat.

“With increased human movement around the region and, especially, stronger weather patterns in regards to climate change, there are more possible routes for invasive insects,” Bahder said.

Terry Spencer writes the Associated Press.

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WILFREDO LEE/AP

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