CONTROLLING THE SPREAD OF XYLELLA FASTIDIOSA, THE CAUSAL AGENT OF OLEANDER LEAF SCORCH, BY DISRUPTING VECTOR ACQUISITION AND TRANSMISSION
This report describes research which involved the development of a management strategy for Oleander Leaf Scorch (OLS), a devastating disease which is affecting and ultimately killing oleander plants, a mainstay of the California Department of Transportation (CALTRANS) right-of-way planting. The report documents experiments which focused on determining the impact of a soil-applied systemic insecticide Merit, on the transmission of a plant-pathogenic bacterium, Xylella fastidiosa, to oleander by the glassy-winded sharpshooter (GWSS). The research found that applications of Merit induced GWSS mortality on OLS-diseased and healthy oleanders. Results were inconclusive regarding the impact of Merit on the acquisition of the OLS bacterium from treated-infected oleanders, and its inoculation by infectious GWSS into treated-healthy oleanders.
- Record URL:
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Supplemental Notes:
- Publication Date: July 2002. California Dept. of Transportation, Sacramento CA. Remarks: Performed by University of California, Riverside, Dept. of Entomology under Caltrans Study No. TO-2002/17
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Corporate Authors:
University of California, Riverside
Department of Entomology
Riverside, CA United States 92521California Department of Transportation
1120 N Street
Sacramento, CA United States 95814 -
Authors:
- Blua, M J
- Redak, R A
- Costa, H S
- Publication Date: 2002
Language
- English
Media Info
- Pagination: 13 p.
Subject/Index Terms
- TRT Terms: Insecticides; Pest control; Plant diseases; Roadside flora; Vegetation
- Geographic Terms: California
- Subject Areas: Maintenance and Preservation;
Filing Info
- Accession Number: 00933011
- Record Type: Publication
- Source Agency: UC Berkeley Transportation Library
- Report/Paper Numbers: FHWA/CA/TO-2002/17
- Files: CALTRANS, STATEDOT
- Created Date: Oct 31 2002 12:00AM