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Header

Title

Prevalence and Distribution of Phony Peach Disease (Caused by Xylella fastidiosa) in the United States | Plant Disease

Authors

Ms Kendall A Johnson; Dr Clive Bock; Dr Edgar L Vinson; Dr Phillip Brannen

Availability

Better title

Prevalence and Distribution of Phony Peach Disease (Caused by Xylella fastidiosa) in the United States | Plant Disease

Source

Plant Disease (apsnet.org)

URL

https://apsjournals.apsnet.org/doi/10.1094/PDIS-03-22-0653-RE

Date

2022-06-30

Description

Abstract

Peach is an important specialty fruit crop in the United States (U.S.), and phony peach disease (PPD), caused by Xylella fastidiosa (Xf) subspecies multiplex, has been a major cause of yield loss since it was first observed in 1885. Under a federal eradication program, surveys of PPD were conducted from 1929 to 1972, when the program was terminated. No surveys have been conducted in ~50 years, so the current prevalence of PPD in the U.S. is unknown, especially in the Southeast where damage was previously most severe. To ascertain the status of PPD, we surveyed orchards in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina from June to August of 2020, and except for South Carolina and northern Georgia, PPD was prevalent. Trees in 17 orchards were subjected to confirmation of Xf using the AmplifyRP® XRT+ for Xf to corroborate our visual assessments; based on these tests, PPD incidence in the orchards ranged from 0% to 30.5%. Ancillary written surveys relative PPD presence and prevalence were sent to fruit pathologists from universities in twenty states where PPD was historically reported. Only 36.8% of respondents reported that PPD either currently or recently occurred in their state and of these, three reported PPD to be of significant concern. The results of the physical and written surveys indicate PPD remains prevalent mainly in the southeastern region of the U.S., but in other states where previously reported, it is either not present or has very low prevalence when compared to historical accounts of the disease.

Keywords

tags = Xylella fastidiosa,phony peach disease,peach,disease survey

Body

Prevalence and Distribution of Phony Peach Disease (Caused by Xylella fastidiosa) in the United States

Authors and Affiliations

Abstract

Peach is an important specialty fruit crop in the United States (U.S.), and phony peach disease (PPD), caused by Xylella fastidiosa (Xf) subspecies multiplex, has been a major cause of yield loss since it was first observed in 1885. Under a federal eradication program, surveys of PPD were conducted from 1929 to 1972, when the program was terminated. No surveys have been conducted in ~50 years, so the current prevalence of PPD in the U.S. is unknown, especially in the Southeast where damage was previously most severe. To ascertain the status of PPD, we surveyed orchards in Alabama, Florida, Georgia, and South Carolina from June to August of 2020, and except for South Carolina and northern Georgia, PPD was prevalent. Trees in 17 orchards were subjected to confirmation of Xf using the AmplifyRP® XRT+ for Xf to corroborate our visual assessments; based on these tests, PPD incidence in the orchards ranged from 0% to 30.5%. Ancillary written surveys relative PPD presence and prevalence were sent to fruit pathologists from universities in twenty states where PPD was historically reported. Only 36.8% of respondents reported that PPD either currently or recently occurred in their state and of these, three reported PPD to be of significant concern. The results of the physical and written surveys indicate PPD remains prevalent mainly in the southeastern region of the U.S., but in other states where previously reported, it is either not present or has very low prevalence when compared to historical accounts of the disease.