Rootstocks and HLB Tolerance — Another Perspective
EDIS Cover Volume 2017 Peer reviewed articles in Citrus Industry Magazine
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Keywords

HLB Management
Rootstocks

How to Cite

Albrecht, Ute. 2017. “Rootstocks and HLB Tolerance — Another Perspective”. EDIS 2017 (May). Gainesville, FL. https://journals.flvc.org/edis/article/view/93353.

Abstract

Tolerance to a disease is generally defined as the ability to be productive in the presence of disease-causing organisms. This is contrary to resistance, which is defined as the ability to completely evade a pathogen due to specific resistance mechanisms.

The question as to what defines an HLB-“tolerant” rootstock was posed in an article by Bill Castle, Jude Grosser, Ed Stover and Kim Bowman in the June 2015 issue of Citrus Industry magazine. The article describes observations from several rootstock field trials conducted in collaboration with commercial growers. Independent surveys of these trials conducted by researchers and growers on tree appearance and crop ratings indicated that no one rootstock appears to be tolerant 100 percent of the time. Rather, tree performance seemed erratic and subject to influences by other factors such as psyllid incidence, cultural practices and soil environment.

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References

Albrecht U, Bowman KD (2011). Tolerance of the trifoliate citrus hybrid US-897 (Citrus reticulata Blanco x Poncirus trifoliata L. Raf.) to huanglongbing. HortScience 46:16-22.

Albrecht U, Bowman KD (2012). Tolerance of trifoliate citrus rootstock hybrids to Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus. Scientia Horticulturae 147:71-80.

Albrecht U, McCollum G, Bowman KD (2012). Influence of rootstock variety on Huanglongbing disease development in field-grown sweet orange (Citrus sinensis [L.] Osbeck) trees. Scientia Horticulurae 138:210-220.

Bowman KD, McCollum G (2015). Release of US-1516, citrus rootstock. US Department of Agriculture, ARS, Washington, DC.

Bowman KD, McCollum G, Albrecht U (2016). Performance of ‘Valencia‘ orange (Citrus sinensis [L.] Osbeck) on 17 rootstocks in a trial severely affected by huanglongbing. Scientia Horticulturae:355-361.

Bowman KD, Faulkner L, Kesinger M (2016). New citrus rootstocks released by USDA 2001-2010: Field performance and nursery characteristics. HortScience. 51:1208-1214.

Castle B, Grosser J, Bowman K, Stover E (2015). An HLB-tolerant citrus rootstock: what exactly does that mean? Citrus Industry vol. June (2015), p. 16-19.

Johnson EG, Wu J, Bright DB, Graham JH (2014). Association of ‘Candidatis Liberibacter asiaticus’ root infection, but not phloem plugging with root loss on huanglongbing-affected trees prior to appearance of foliar symptoms. Plant Pathology 63:290-298

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