San Diego Union-Tribune

BOARD OKS CONTRACT TO COMBAT CITRUS GREENING DISEASE

County and state to work together to prevent psyllid infestatio­ns

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The Board of Supervisor­s on Sept. 26 approved Riverside County Agricultur­al Commission­er Ruben Arroyo’s request for his office to remain under contract with the state to enforce regulation­s aimed at combating citrus greening disease.

In a 5-0 vote without comment, the board signed off on the $751,594 agreement with the California Department

of Food & Agricultur­e to take all necessary steps to contain and prevent spread of Asian citrus psyllid infestatio­ns, which cause greening disease, also known as Huanglonbi­ng, or HLB.

The contract will expire on Sept. 30, 2024.

The county’s commercial citrus crops, spread across roughly 20,000 acres, are valued around $200 million. For the last six years, the board has maintained a local emergency declaratio­n connected to greening disease.

Last year, over 80 residentia­l citrus trees countywide were plagued with HLB.

In July 2017, a grapefruit tree and two other trees in the area of

Chicago and Marlboroug­h avenues on the east end of Riverside became infested with psyllids, prompting the state to place a quarantine over a 94-square-mile area encompassi­ng both Riverside and San Bernardino counties.

Under the still-active order, only citrus products that are “commercial­ly cleaned and packed” are permitted to be shipped out of the quarantine zone.

No citrus nursery stock can be moved outside the area under quarantine, and no residentia­lly grown citrus fruit can be moved. However, growers are permitted to consume and share with people within the quarantine­d locations.

A map of the impacted area, along with the boundaries of similar quarantine­s in Los Angeles and Orange counties, can be found at www.cdfa.ca.gov/citrus/pests_diseases/acp/regulation.html.

The board first declared a local state of emergency in August 2017 because of the potential spread of greening disease.

The city of Riverside’s foundation­al citrus-bearing tree, known as the “parent navel orange tree,” located at the intersecti­on of Arlington and Magnolia avenues, received protective netting and treatment in April 2019 to prevent an Asian citrus psyllid infestatio­n. The tree is listed as a California Historic Landmark and has been preserved since 1873.

Psyllids host virulent bacteria that cause HLB, which destroys plants’ vascular systems, rendering fruits misshapen and unmarketab­le. The disease typically kills infected trees within a few years.

The finger-tip size, moth-like insects arrived in the U.S. in the 1990s. The disease rampaged throughout Florida in 2005 and has since inflicted over $3 billion of damage to crops in the Sunshine State, according to a study published by the University of Florida.

Psyllids originate in tropical and subtropica­l regions. They first appeared in California in 2008 and have been trapped throughout the Inland Empire.

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