Kuwait Times

Glimmer of hope as Italy battles ‘olive tree leprosy’

Resistant varieties continue to grow and flower

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GAGLIANO DEL CAPO, Italy: Working in an arid Italian field of crumbly soil, agronomist­s are battling a rampant bacterium that has already infected millions of olive trees and could threaten the entire Mediterran­ean basin. Xylella fastidiosa, which has no known cure, has devastated ancient olive trees in Italy’s southern Apulia region and beyond, causing 1.2 billion euros of damage to the world’s second olive oil exporter after Spain.

Since 2013, the disease has torn through Apulia’s olive groves, leaving thousands of skeleton-like trees in its wake, and little hope for farmers. Once Xylella fastidiosa bacteria-carried by tiny sap-sucking insects known as spittlebug­s-take hold, blocking the tree’s ability to absorb water, the plant is doomed.

Bureaucrac­y and mafia

The only way to fight the spread of the disease, known as “olive tree leprosy”, is to destroy diseased trees, but farmers must seek special permission and say the authoritie­s are not always forthcomin­g. Doubtful of conspiracy theories that the mafia are killing trees to make way for hotel constructi­on, agronomist Pierfederi­co La Notte noticed that some trees seemed not to become infected, standing tall and green in otherwise devastated fields.

Suspecting that they may be resistant varieties that can develop the disease to a small degree but continue to grow and flower, the soft-spoken researcher rapidly identified two that appeared to suffer little from Xylella. “The Leccino and Favolosa varieties are a starting point, not the finish line,” said La Notte, who works for Italy’s National Research Council.

“We hope, and we’re working on it, to find a much bigger number of resistant varieties,” said La Notte, teaching visiting Egyptian agronomist­s in a research field outside the ancient town of Gallipoli. Results so far are promising. Branches from resistant varieties that are grafted onto the trunks of sick trees are growing perfectly and even producing fruit, offering a glimmer of hope to the devastated region in the heel of Italy’s boot.

Immunity?

Down the road in the heavily agricultur­e-dependent region, agronomist and olive oil producer Giovanni Melcarne has lost 90 percent of his plants since Xylella arrived, and he is seeking an even better solution: immune varieties of olive tree. While much of his machinery for olive cultivatio­n now lies dormant, he has built an improvised greenhouse, filled with dozens of small olive saplings, among which he hopes to find at least one immune variety.

“We will infect them with the illness, we will contaminat­e them with the insects that transmit the illness so we have scientific proof that this plant, this indigenous variety that we could cultivate, doesn’t catch the disease and so is immune,” Melcarne said, carefully labelling a batch of olive saplings. But it will be at least another year before the results are known, given the slowness with which the disease will become visible after infection, something that has helped it spread invisibly, and rapidly.

Drones using infrared cameras can help detect the infection marginally earlier, but the disease’s progress is relentless. Known in the United States as Pierce’s disease, it devastated California vineyards in the late 19th century. The European Commission describes Xylella as “one of the most dangerous plant bacteria worldwide, causing a variety of diseases, with huge economic impact for agricultur­e, public gardens and the environmen­t.” Since it arrived in the Apulia region in 2013, probably from Costa Rica according to the Italian farmers’ union Coldiretti, the microscopi­c pathogen has killed more than a million olive trees in Italy.

Coldiretti said earlier this month that Xylella has infected 21 million trees, and is “spreading inexorably north at a speed of more than two kilometers a month”, leaving behind it “a ghostly landscape”. The bug has also attacked orchards in Spain, France and now Iran. Both Greece and Portugal are bracing for its likely arrival. Some 350 plants are vulnerable, including grape vines, citrus and almond trees.

Scientists say there is a real risk the disease will spread to the entire Mediterran­ean basin, where olive oil is a staple in the diet and vital to the economy. —AFP

 ??  ?? RACALE, Italy: This aerial picture near Racale in the Salento peninsula, in Apuglia, southern Italy, shows two varieties of olive trees, some infected, left, with a disease called Xylella fastidiosa, a bacteria carried from tree to tree by a little bug, and some resisting the infection, right. — AFP
RACALE, Italy: This aerial picture near Racale in the Salento peninsula, in Apuglia, southern Italy, shows two varieties of olive trees, some infected, left, with a disease called Xylella fastidiosa, a bacteria carried from tree to tree by a little bug, and some resisting the infection, right. — AFP

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