Author Topic: Open Letter to all commercial avocado growers in the world. Look out is coming  (Read 2459 times)

CTMIAMI

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Open Letter to Avocado Producers: 

I grow tropical avocados commercially in Homestead, Florida. That's been my passion for the last 16  years, The last five years have been a frustrating nightmare caused by Laurel Wilt. This morning I marked three more trees for extraction in addition to the 10 trees I marked three days ago.  I lose about 20-25  a month and it's on the rise.
The largest avocado-producing areas are free of the problem at the moment. In South Florida, tropical avocado is a very small industry with little economic and political influence,  as a result not much attention is paid to this crises.  In the Homestead, Florida avocado region the pathogen and vectors are everywhere. There are orchards that disappear from one year to the next. Unfortunately, we have been on the front lines of this disease.

This creates an opportunity for the rest of the avocado producing areas,  so far free of this disease to do  research in this area. There is a lot of research to be done and as time goes on we gain more experience. Here, there is access to adult trees in the field for testing and research. This is not the case for areas in which  the disease has not made its appearance.

I only mention some investigations that could be pending:

Some trees die in a week, however there are trees that look resistant to Laurel Wilt,  they have tested positive from root to canopy, proven on multiple occasions and methodologies, yet they are still alive and show no symptoms of the wilt.  I know of two, one in particular I call 9-7, is positive since January 2019 and continues alive and recovering. Personally I think this tree is talking to us, however there are no funds to see what it tells us.

Early detection in the process is vital to early removal of diseased trees,  before other trees acquire the disease.  It is essential to determine whether the tree is contaminated with little pathogen, to extract it before it contaminates adjacent trees.  There is no data on the time between when a tree is contaminated and when the first sign of "sadness" becomes visible.  Less than a week ago I detected a little sadness in a branch. When cutting it, it looked positive for wilt, I continued to check three  more trees on the same row and  all three  tested positive at various levels without  visible symptoms. Root contamination moves unnoticed for weeks or months.   This type of root contagion remains an observable presumption of farmers and  has not  been investigated.

Some producers believe that there are two or more strains of the fungus that causes the disease,  (Raffaelea Lauricola),  one  much more aggressive than others. A full DNA study is complicated and costly. As I understand it, it hasn't been done and there are no plans.

Other producers began doing thermal treatments on infected and stumped  trees. I tried on 8 of my trees. All are alive and doing well, the two oldest are 17 months old and continue to grow. On the other hand, the eight have tested positive for Laurel Wilt, post-treatment. There is no scientific data to understand what is going on and what opportunities this offers.

What attracts vectors and what can farmers do? Many growers are gaining experience of their own. I stopped injecting phosphorous acid to treat Phytophthora because I have noticed that these trees have a higher frequency of vector inoculation than others not injected. I suspect why, but we don't have a scientific foundation to know what's going on.

Can trees be vaccinated with some form of vaccine to increase resistance or defense against the pathogen?

And so on, I could mention a lot more.

Looking back we knew it was coming, but we didn't prepare enough, partly because it wasn't always easy to test in the field and there were a lot of restrictions on conducting test  in greenhouses and we just didn't believe it or wanted to invest funds in research. Some thought it would never come.

We all see these bark beetles moving around the world with little or no restriction. One day any area can wake up to the bad news.

I can tell you this: you can imagine this disease in your grove, more or less we know what it does, you can read articles, watch YouTube videos, after you finish your imagination exercise, I can tell you as a grower dealing with this every day, MULTIPLY IT BY 10 !

Please, support research in the area where  it can  best be done. Get ahead of it.

Carlos de la Torre
Carlos
 Tweeter: @carlosdlt280
www.myavocadotrees.com
zone 10a Miami-Dade County

tropical-farmer

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So sorry about your trees... it’s always heart breaking to lose one, not to mention the whole grove 😰
have you tried to use ectomycorrhizae to strengthen the trees against phytophthora? i read our university articles about mycorrhizal protection being great success instead of using irrigation+fertilization... would be interesting to see it in action in a “real” grove.
Satya

shot

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Is Tilt not working now?
So you feel heat treatment is effective as in greening in citrus?

behlgarden

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very sorry to hear. USDA should put quarantine zones for this and members here should avoid propagation to avoid spreading it.

ScottR

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Carlos, so sorry to here of your continuing battle with this devastating disease it must be hard to watch your tree's come down with this disease! Hopefully someone or some university will take up the fight to help get rid of this nasty disease!!  :(
Stay strong & hang in there you have provided this form with ton's of information and i thank you for all your hard work.

pineislander

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very sorry to hear. USDA should put quarantine zones for this and members here should avoid propagation to avoid spreading it.
Quarantine has to focus on the ambrosia beetle vector and it has alternate native hosts like the Red bay tree. land clearing operations accidentally removing infested trees of the alternate host could move the beetles and would be very difficult to enforce. Carlos has shown how stressors initiate beetle attacks and even lightning struck trees are immediately hit by the beetles so for now the best protective measure seems to be keeping the healthiest trees going.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Laurel_wilt

CTMIAMI

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Let me address some of the very good observation from the Members. I’ll address all as I have time.
 
Is Tilt  not working any more?  Tilt a broad spectrum propiconazole fungicide approved for tree injection under special label.  Tilt was not designed for tree injection instead is designed for drench or spray, im these two modes of application does not build up enough PPM to have an effect on the fungus.  The Tilt injection does not translocate well within the tree. A part of the tree can have 100 PPM of Propiconazole and a part just one inch away can have less than 1ppm. The end result is that the fungus can move in the path of lease resistance. In addition the new growth is not protected and trees would have to be injected every 18 month or so. Injections produce infection of tree wounds and no one knows of long term efficiency. 100’s of trees have died that have been  injected with Tilt several times.
The worst part of injection in my opinion is the following: When you inject a broad spectrum fungicide it kills all or most of the Fungi in its path. Someone recently did some work on endophytic fungi inside avocado trees. There are literally hundreds  of them, they get wiped out and the space they vacate gets occupied by not so friendly micro organisms that begins to ferment inside the tree. Generating an attractant for the beetles by emitting a smell of ethanol a signal that the tree is in trouble and the beetle’s job is to clean the forest. They are efficient at their job.  No research has been done on this but I’m so convinced I stop using Tilt.


Carlos
 Tweeter: @carlosdlt280
www.myavocadotrees.com
zone 10a Miami-Dade County

Avoman

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I guess the disease gets in the avo seeds also correct ? so im i smart to stay away from any avo seeds coming out of florida?

Squam256

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I guess the disease gets in the avo seeds also correct ? so im i smart to stay away from any avo seeds coming out of florida?

No.

CTMIAMI

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Agree, researches have worked on that and it does not get into the fruit at all.
Carlos
 Tweeter: @carlosdlt280
www.myavocadotrees.com
zone 10a Miami-Dade County

shot

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(Other producers began doing thermal treatments on infected and stumped  trees)

Is the premise of heat treatment to rid the tissue of the fungal  pathogen as in citrus  greening heat treatment to kill the bacteria ?If so what temp and duration seems to be effective?Root thermal wood be difficult.

 Greening is being treated in in Arcadia fl in a 100 acre grove with a rolling solar heated apparatus with fans ,but it is a slower killing disease.Maybe heated water that would take care of root pathogen more effectively

 It is going to be difficult to say the  least and needs funded research.

Most likely a multifaceted approach is needed.Repellents botanicals and mechanical
( Surround WP)
« Last Edit: October 31, 2019, 09:52:36 AM by shot »

JoeP450

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Carlos,

Maybe try contacting the university of FL and seeing if anyone pursuing a PhD in a related science science would like to take on the research project then apply for a study grant, https://www.ams.usda.gov/services/grants to fund the project. Here are some examples of awards in dollar amounts and the topics their are studying https://portal.nifa.usda.gov/lmd4/recent_awards?report_title=Recent%20Awards&from_site=NIFA&search_label=Awards%20Listing , to be honest there is more than enough money available to go around and every year plenty of it is allotted, what ends up are frivolous projects being studied/undertaken and you for example have a significant need and issue.

-Joep450

JoeP450

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Last month the “specialty crop research initiative” allocated 7.3 million to study the spotted lantern fly and its impact...

-Joep450

CTMIAMI

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Interesting, how funds are apportioned.
I'm very familiar with UF researchers as a matter of fact I do volunteer work there and go by almost every day. They are located 3 minute drive from my grove. I'm familiar with many grants on Laurel Wilt that have been applied for and rejected. Hundreds of projects with more political cloud that we have get approved.

May be what is going to take is the realization by the millennials that their avocado toast is in danger of extinction   :)
Carlos
 Tweeter: @carlosdlt280
www.myavocadotrees.com
zone 10a Miami-Dade County

 

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