Today you’ll discover how to identify citrus greening, the disease that has been destroying Florida’s citrus industry.
I hate to say this… but I think we need to stop planting citrus for a while.
The spread of greening is consuming the state. My mom had a tree that got it in Ft. Lauderdale… a woman came to one of my talks and told me two new trees she’d just planted were diagnosed with it… I talked with the Orlando extension agents and they’re getting cases almost daily… it’s ridiculous. Not a good time to plant an orange tree.
If you think your citrus has greening, you need to ID it quickly; then destroy the tree. There’s no cure at this point. Greening is spread by the Asian Citrus Psyllid, which looks like this:
Original photo is from http://www.ipm.ucdavis.edu/ |
The psyllid is a tiny thing… but it carries the disease much like mosquitoes carry malaria. If they feed on a sick tree, then on a healthy one, the healthy one may become infected. Ladybugs love to consume these guys, so if you keep plenty of places in your yard for beneficial insects – and don’t spray – you may dodge the greening bullet.
How to Identify Citrus Greening
1. Look for strangely yellow shoots.
If the new growth looks like the tree is way short on nitrogen – look out!
2. If the fruit is bitter, salty, misshapen, twisted or ripening in weird ways – look out!
3. If your leaves look mottled and chlorotic, look out!
The above photos were taken during a tree examination I did in South Florida. I double-checked with the experts at the Extension office and my fears were realized. We destroyed the tree in the hopes that the disease hadn’t already spread to the neighboring citrus. Chances are good, however, that it has, so further monitoring of those trees is necessary. If you aren’t sure you can identify citrus greening, call your local extension office and have them check for you.
Many of us are sad about seeing Grandma’s tree get sick… or the 10-year-old Navel orange you planted when you got married… or the wonderful lemon tree at the neighbor’s house that just doesn’t produce right anymore.
There is no cure for citrus greening – you can’t save them. Don’t try. Get rid of the tree before the disease spreads further… and pray that soon we’ll have a cure… or at least citrus varieties that are genetically resistant.
2 comments
I have a citrus tree left to me by mawmaw.
It is in a planter. It had five very small fruits on it last May when I got it.
They all fell
Off in the move. I peeled
And tried one of them. Perfectly formed, somewhat tangy, no seed in that one.
Fruit is almost as big as a golf ball.
The tree is 5+yrs old, I have to water every3-4 days.
Stayed inside from Nov 2023 to now, April 2024! It It was outside last year on back deck from May to Nov 2023. It had 3 diff sets of flowering times. It has dozens of fruit on it varying in sz from quarter to almost golf ball.
Any information would be welcomed.
Thank you
Josie, plant rescuer
Now.
What kind of tree?
Should I repot or put in the ground?
I can put in the ground in zone 8a (Pinehurt nc)inland sandhills.
Or zone 8b (Calabash nc) coastal soil
I would just put it in a larger pot. 8b is hard on citrus and may kill it.
I don’t know what type of citrus it is from the description.
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