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Present Phytosanitary Risks – Harmful Organisms Information Seminar on Phytosanitary Issues Plant Health Directorate Date: 6th February, 2015 Main Aim of the Directorate Mission Statement The Plant Health Department, as the Maltese National Plant Protection Organization (NPPO), co-ordinates and regulates activities on the control/introduction/dispersion of major pests and diseases harmful to plant production while encouraging the production of good quality and healthy plants, as foreseen in the International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC) and the European Union’s legislative provisions. The Department implements preventive and control measures through; • • • Surveys and inspections in nurseries, woodland areas and public areas. Inspections at trade and boarder inspection posts (BIPs). Control measures via eradication programmes and contingency plans. These measures will ensure Malta is safe guarded against the introduction and spread of organisms of quarantine and quality importance which are harmful to plants within Malta and the EU. Legal Basis • Council Directive 2000/29/EC and its amendments On protective measures against the introduction into the Community of organisms harmful to plants or plant products and against their spread within the Community. • Transposed by Legal Notice 97/2004 (and its amendments) - PLANT QUARANTINE ACT, 2001 (ACT NO. XI OF 2001) Quarantine Citrus diseases Stubborn disease- Spiroplasma citri • Stubborn is caused by a bacteria Spiroplasma citri • Principal economic hosts are grapefruits (C. paradisi), lemons (C. limon),mandarins (C. reticulata), oranges (C. sinensis) and sour oranges (C. aurantium). • This disease is of greatest concern in countries having a hot, dry climate • Widespread in certain Mediterranean and EPPO countries such as Cyprus, Egypt, France (Corsica only), Greece, Italy (Sardinia, Sicily), Spain, Morocco Turkey and Syria Symptoms of Stubborn disease • Affected trees are stunted and the leaves are broader and shorter, sometimes mottled or chlorotic • Under very hot conditions leaves may have blunted or heart- shaped yellow tips, which is a highly diagnostic character • Fruiting tends to be suppressed, stunted, lopsided or acorn shaped and discoloured Quarantine citrus diseases Stubborn Disease- Spiroplasma citri Source: http://www.fao.org Source: http://www.fao.org Source: http://ccpp.ucr.edu Quarantine citrus diseases Stubborn disease- Spiroplasma citri-Vectors • The vector of stubborn disease is the sugarbeet leafhopper- Circulifer tenellus and Neoaliturus haematoceps • Vectors present in Mediterranean and EPPO countries such as Algeria, Egypt, France (Corsica; della Giustina, 1989), Israel, Italy (Sicily), Libya, Morocco, Spain (including Canary Islands), Tunisia, Turkey Quarantine citrus diseases Stubborn disease- Spiroplasma citrivectors Source: www.fao.org Source: www.fao.org Control of Stubborn disease • Nursery trees should be grown under screenhouse • Stunted trees should be destroyed • Healthy source of bud-wood (spread through infected bud-wood) • Insecticide treatments against vectors are not efficient Quarantine citrus diseases Citrus Tristeza Virus (CTV) Source: www.eppo.org Source: www.ars-grin.gov Vectors of Citrus Tristeza Virus present in the Maltese Islands Melon Aphid (Aphis gossypii) Citrus Black Aphid (Toxoptera aurantii) Spirea Aphid (Aphis Spiraecola) Vectors of CTV- Toxoptera citricida Source: FFTC 2006 Source: Nolasco, 2005 Transmission modes and control of CTV • • • • • • Infected plants Infected cuttings (grafting) Vectors (aphids) Use of Tristeza –tolerant rootstocks Eradication of infected trees Control of aphid vectors Citrus canker, caused by Xanthomonas citri subsp. citri • A bacterial disease of citrus that causes premature leaf and fruit drop • Main symptoms are lesions on the leaves, stems and fruit of citrus trees • Affects the health and marketability of infected fruit • Canker causes the citrus tree to continually decline in health and fruit production until the tree produces no fruit at all Citrus canker can spread by • Windborne rain • Lawnmowers and other landscaping equipment • People carrying the infection on their hands, clothing, or equipment • Moving infected or exposed plants or plant parts Source: www.apsnet.org Source: www.apsnet.org Citrus canker control • No cure exists for citrus canker; disease management is the only way to control the disease • Citrus canker management involves the use of the timely applications of copper-containing products and windbreaks to hinder inoculum dispersal • Most infections occur between April and July on oranges and three to four applications of coppercontaining materials at 3-week intervals should be sufficient to obtain relatively clean fruit Quarantine citrus diseases Citrus dry rot- Deuterophoma traceiphilla • Fungal disease affecting lemon, lime, bergamot and sour orange • Symptoms appear in spring as leaf and shoot chlorosis followed by dieback of twigs and branches • When sliced, recently affected branches show distinct yellowish discolouration of tissue • Can lead to destruction of the whole tree Quarantine citrus diseases Deuterophoma traceiphilla Source: www.padil.gov.au Source: www.bspp.org.uk Source: www.tagem.gov.tr Control of Deuterophoma traceiphilla • Removal and burning of infected shoots or whole plants when extensively affected • Prevent physical damage to trees by rotovation to prevent inoculation • Two to five chemical spray preventive treatments using copper based fungicides or Thiophanate-methyl should be applied during autumn/winter and especially immediately after hail storms (Pollini, 2002; EPPO, 2004) Quarantine citrus diseases Citrus Black Spot(Guignardia citricarpa) • A fungal disease that affects citrus plants throughout subtropical climates • Will cause a reduction in both fruit quantity and quality • Symptoms include both fruit and leaf lesions, the latter being critical to inter-tree dispersal • Is present in many countries such as: Argentina, Australia, Brazil, China, Ghana, Mozambique, Philippines, South Africa, Sub-Saharan Africa, Taiwan, The United States and Uruguay Citrus Black Spot control • Strict regulation and management is necessary to control this disease since there are currently no citrus varieties that are resistant • Applications of Copper based fungicides from May-September may help in controlling the spread of the disease • Another method of control is to accelerate the leaf litter decomposition under the trees in citrus groves, this will reduce the chance for ascospore inoculation Quarantine citrus diseases Citrus Black Spot Source :http://citrusresearch.org/citrus-black-spot/ Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citrus_black_spot Source:http://agrihortcommunications.com.au/?p=993 Source: http://www.agrofit.com.br/portal/citros/54citros/106-mancha-preta-uma-realidade-na-citricultura Olive quick decline syndrome caused by Xylella fastidiosa • Detected in olive trees in Lecce province in Apulia, Italy in October 2013 • Outbreak in Italy characterised by extensive leaf scorch and dieback • This disease infected olive trees across 74,000 acres of the region of Apulia • Spread of the disease is by small xylem feeding insect vectors • Main entry is the movement for plants for planting Xylella fastidiosa • Regulated in Annex I, Part A, Section I of Council Directive 2000/29/EC • Regulated by Commission Decision 2014/497/EU Annex I Specifies the requirements for introduction of specified plants from 3rd Countries Annex II Specifies the requirements for movement of specified within the EU Union Olive quick decline syndrome caused by Xylella fastidiosa Source: http://www.eppo.int/QUARANTINE/special_topics/Xylella_fastidiosa/Xylella_fastidiosa.htm Olive quick decline syndrome caused by Xylella fastidiosa • The disease cannot be controlled by any pesticide • The only control of this disease is by uprooting and burning infected trees and applying pesticides for the vectors Source: http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Philaenus.spumarius.-.lindsey.jpg Anoplophora chinensis (CLB), Anoplophora glabripennis (ALB) • Regulated by Commission Decision 2012/138/EU • Beetles of CLB and ALB are quite similar and both have white patches • Body size ranges between 11 and 40 mm • The major distinction between the two species is the presence of numerous granulae at basal one-fourth of elytra in CLB while they are absent in ALB Larval and Pupal stages Pine Wood Nematode Bursaphelenchus xylophilus • PWN is a dangerous quarantine pest in forestry • There are 70 tree species known as hosts of PWN • It is 0.8 millimetres to 1 millimetre long so it is difficult to observe • PWN is vectored by bark beetles of the genus Monochamus Pine Wood Nematode Life cycle Source- http://www.na.fs.fed.us/spfo/pubs/howtos/ht_pinewilt/pinewilt.htm Pine Wood Nematode Bursaphelenchus xylophilus This pest can spread through the following: • Worldwide Trade • Untreated or badly treated packaging wood is the most dangerous factor for the distribution of PWN • Round wood with bark • Bark of infested trees • Wood chips • Containers with living vectors • Bonsai plants Potato cyst nematode • Nematode that live on the roots of the plants in the Solanum family • Regulated by Annex I part A Section II of Council Directive 2000/29/EC and Council Directive 2007/33/EC • Hosts- Mainly potatoes, but tomatoes and aubergines are also attacked. Other Solanum spp. and their hybrids can also act as hosts • Present in many European countries Potato cyst nematode • Detected in 2012 during the official surveys carried by the directorate in Zebbug Malta • Official result showed that it was not final stage (empty Cysts) ,the crop did not show any growth decline symptoms or yield reduction • From the intensive surveys carried by the directorate to date it can be concluded that our climate and the environmental conditions are not favourable for this pest to spread. Potato cyst nematode Source- www.snipview.com Source- http://us.vocuspr.com Phytophthora ramorum • Fungal disease • Regulated by Commission Decision 2002/757/EC • Hosts: Quercus sp., Laurus nobilis (Bay laurel), Viburnum and Rhododendron • Found in the EU on several nursery plants (mainly Rhododendron, Viburnum) in United Kingdom, Italy, Spain, Czech Republic, Netherlands, Denmark, France, Ireland, Slovenia and Sweden Phytophthora ramorum Effect of Phytophthora on holm oak Source: cisr.ucr.edu Gibberella circinata • A fungal disease • Regulated by Commission Decision 2007/433/EC • Hosts-Pinus sp (pines) • This disease is present in Spain • Surveys in are carried out woodland areas, public areas and nurseries Gibberella circinata Source: www.diark.org Source: http://pt.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gibberella_circinata THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION