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Musgraveia sulciventris is a large stink bug found in Australia, sometimes known as the bronze orange bug. It is considered a pest, particularly to plants in the citrus group. [ 1 ] Bronze orange bugs suck the sap from trees, which causes the flowers and fruit to fall.
Blight = young tree decline, rough lemon decline GTP Blind pocket GTP Cachexia Citrus cachexia viroid (Hostuviroid) Chlorotic dwarf White-fly transmitted GTP Citrus dwarfing Various viroids Citrus vein enation (CVEV) = woody gall GTP (possible luteovirus) Citrus yellow mottle GTP Citrus yellow ringspot GTP Concave gum GTP Cristacortis GTP
Co-infection between citrus blight and citrus greening disease (HLB) is possible, and is so severe a health issue that trees infected by both diseases usually die. [3] The disease affects trees of all ages and types, including seedlings and rootstocks. Young trees infected by citrus blight grow until the age of 5–6 before their growth is ...
Significant pests include the cottony cushion scale, a pest of citrus fruit trees, [81] the green peach aphid and other aphids which attack crops worldwide and transmit diseases, [82] and jumping plant lice which can be plant-specific and transmit diseases, as with the Asian citrus psyllid which transmits citrus greening disease. [83]
Planococcus citri, commonly known as the citrus mealybug, is a species of mealybugs native to Asia. It has been introduced to the rest of the world, including Europe, the Americas, and Oceania, as an agricultural pest. It is associated with citrus, but it attacks a wide range of crop plants, ornamental plants, and wild flora. [1]
A major grower said this week it was abandoning its citrus growing operations, reflecting the headwinds Florida's signature crops are facing following a series of hurricanes and tree diseases.
Although citrus is the main crop attacked by red scale, it can also be found on species from at least seventy-seven plant families [9] and has been successfully reared in the laboratory on potato tubers and pumpkin. [10] Scale insects of all ages feed by sucking sap. They are found on all parts of the plant but are most noticeable on the fruit.
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