New Fight Against Citrus Greening Starts at the Root
close_up

Este sitio utiliza cookies. Obtenga mas informacion sobre los fines de su uso y la configuracion de cookies en su navegador. Al utilizar este sitio, usted acepta el uso de cookies de acuerdo con la configuracion actual de su navegador Mas informacion sobre cookies

New Fight Against Citrus Greening Starts at the Root

Tiempo de lectura: poco mas de 1 minutos

New Fight Against Citrus Greening Starts at the Root

Fuente: AGRONEWS Todas las noticias de la fuente

Researchers in Florida are shifting the fight against citrus greening toward stronger rootstocks and more resilient trees. Scientists say breeding work now focuses on trees that can survive the full nursery-to-grove cycle and tolerate field pressures from pests, stress and disease. rootstocks boost resilience

Matthew Mattia, a USDA researcher, says the effort begins in the nursery where clean, vigorous trees must be propagated and shipped to growers reliably. "The first stage is the nursery: the nursery needs trees to be able to propagate them and send them to the grove for growers to be able to grow them," Mattia says. In the grove, he adds, trees must tolerate stress and disease while producing fruit that can be harvested and transported.

Adoption of the program's newer rootstocks is rising across Florida, and industry officials point to greater grower uptake as evidence the selections deliver value under pressure. Mattia reports recent increases in use, noting that growers are choosing the new material more often because it better endures grove conditions. 40% adoption rate

Breeding for resilience

The program has developed and released several new and improved rootstocks intended to help trees withstand the disease and other pressures in the field. Field trials and grower feedback are guiding which rootstocks move from experimental blocks into commercial production, and nurseries play a central role in scaling promising lines for broad grower use.

State support has followed industry need: last year Florida lawmakers approved funds aimed at revitalizing the citrus sector, with much of that money targeted to research and field trials testing rootstock performance under real-world conditions. $140 million approved

Grower adoption continues to drive which rootstocks achieve commercial scale, and nurseries are adjusting propagation to meet demand for the newer selections. Adoption stands at more than 40% of rootstocks grown in Florida.

Photo - rfdtv.brightspotgocdn.com

Temas: Agronomy, Seeds & Breeding, Citrus

Agronews

Noticias por tema

No puede recordar su contrasena?
Acepto el acuerdo de usuario

Contactar con la redaccion