Riverside

CLas-Positive Psyllid Sample in Riverside County

Daniel CooperCalifornia Corner, Psyllids

Riverside
Adult Asian citrus psyllid
Image by utkarsh07/DepositPhotos

An adult Asian citrus psyllid (ACP) sample from a residential property in the San Jacinto Valley area of Riverside County, California, has tested positive for Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus (CLas), the bacterium that causes huanglongbing (HLB).

The positive sample was collected as part of the Multi-Pest Risk Survey on a residential property in Hemet. It was confirmed positive for CLas on July 17 by the Citrus Research Board’s Jerry Dimitman Laboratory. Nymphs were also collected from the property and tested negative for CLas. This is the first confirmed CLas-positive adult ACP found in the San Jacinto Valley area.

An HLB quarantine zone will not be established as a result of this CLas-positive ACP detection. However, California Department of Food and Agriculture (CDFA) staff is conducting surveys and collecting samples from the property and all HLB host plants that are located within a 250-meter radius around the find, per the ACP/HLB Action Plan.

It is crucial that ACP populations continue to be controlled properly in order to stop HLB from spreading, advised California’s Citrus Pest & Disease Prevention Program.  

While CDFA is not requiring mandatory treatment for area commercial growers, those who wish to take proactive steps to protect their groves or who have additional questions can contact Riverside County Grower Liaison Sandra Zwaal.

In September 2023, a CLas-positive ACP sample was collected from a residential property in California’s Ventura County. That sample came from a residential citrus tree in the southwest area of Santa Paula. An HLB quarantine zone was not established as a result of that detection, either. While that first confirmation of a CLas-positive ACP in Ventura County was concerning, HLB was not detected in any Ventura County citrus trees. Learn more here.

Source: Citrus Pest & Disease Prevention Program

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