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Asymptomatic spread of huanglongbing and implications for disease control
Monday, 2015/06/22 | 08:17:15

Jo Ann Lee, Susan E. Halbert, William O. Dawson, Cecile J. Robertson, James E. Keesling, and Burton H. Singer

 

Significance

Huanglongbing (HLB) is a vector-transmitted bacterial infection of citrus trees that poses a major threat to the citrus industry in Florida, Texas, and California. Current control strategies that focus on the vector, the Asian citrus psyllid Diaphorina citri, are usually initiated when the trees become symptomatic, anywhere from 10 mo to several years after initial infection. We show, experimentally, that newly infected young leaves can become infectious within 10–15 d after receiving an inoculum of bacteria from an adult psyllid. We then show by microsimulation of the asymptomatic spread of HLB through a grove under different invasion scenarios and control strategies that reduction of up to 75% of adult psyllids and nymphs can enhance citrus production.

 

Abstract

Huanglongbing (HLB) is a bacterial infection of citrus trees transmitted by the Asian citrus psyllid Diaphorina citri. Mitigation of HLB has focused on spraying of insecticides to reduce the psyllid population and removal of trees when they first show symptoms of the disease. These interventions have been only marginally effective, because symptoms of HLB do not appear on leaves for months to years after initial infection. Limited knowledge about disease spread during the asymptomatic phase is exemplified by the heretofore unknown length of time from initial infection of newly developing cluster of young leaves, called flush, by adult psyllids until the flush become infectious. We present experimental evidence showing that young flush become infectious within 15 d after receiving an inoculum of Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus (bacteria). Using this critical fact, we specify a microsimulation model of asymptomatic disease spread and intensity in a grove of citrus trees. We apply a range of psyllid introduction scenarios to show that entire groves can become infected with up to 12,000 psyllids per tree in less than 1 y, before most of the trees show any symptoms. We also show that intervention strategies that reduce the psyllid population by 75% during the flushing periods can delay infection of a full grove, and thereby reduce the amount of insecticide used throughout a year. This result implies that psyllid surveillance and control, using a variety of recently available technologies, should be used from the initial detection of invasion and throughout the asymptomatic period.

 

See: http://www.pnas.org/content/112/24/7605.abstract

PNAS June June 16, 2015 vol. 112 no. 24 7605-7610

 

Fig. 1.

All panels are for invasion scenario iii. No control (A), elimination of 75% of adult psyllids and nymphs on days 16 and 30 of each flushing period (B), and elimination of 75% of adult psyllids on days 16 and 30 of each flushing period (C). Within each panel, the fraction of psyllids infected (Left) and the fraction of flush infected (Right) are shown. The green segments on the vertical axis (i.e., days since initial invasion of the grove) correspond to flushing periods. Migration of psyllids between trees accounts for the spread through the entire grove. Coordinates in the xy plane correspond to locations of trees. In the simulation, we are not assuming trees are evenly spaced (Microsimulation Modeling of Transmission).

 

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