• Study leads to milestone advances in und

    From ScienceDaily@1:317/3 to All on Wed May 31 22:30:34 2023
    Study leads to milestone advances in understanding lethal bronzing of
    palm trees

    Date:
    May 31, 2023
    Source:
    University of Florida
    Summary:
    Scientists have identified a key chemical associated with lethal
    bronzing (LB) infected palm trees. LB is a bacterial disease that
    kills more than 20 species of palm trees in the Southern United
    States and Caribbean and has been devastating the Florida green
    industries for nearly two decades.


    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIN Email

    ==========================================================================
    FULL STORY ==========================================================================
    Palm trees infected with lethal bronzing disease emit signals that warn
    nearby healthy palms of the threat. Those healthy palms produce their
    own defense that University of Florida scientists one day hope to harness
    to protect palms against the disease.

    Entomologist Brian Bahder and his team at UF/IFAS Fort Lauderdale Research
    and Education Center (UF/IFAS FLREC) consider the study's outcome a
    turning point for palm disease research because it has high potential for developing management strategies for lethal bronzing, a deadly disease
    spread by a small insect commonly called a planthopper. This discovery
    could help manage other palm and plant diseases.

    Plants affected by disease or pests can emit small chemical signals,
    or volatile organic compounds, indicating they are stressed.

    Those compounds warn nearby healthy plants. Those healthy plants can
    activate defense mechanisms -- organic compounds of their own -- to
    potentially stave off the pest responsible for the disease.

    "Volatile organic compounds are common in plants and play an important
    role in protecting the plant," said Bahder. "Most importantly, some of
    these compounds have antimicrobial properties. They have the potential for
    use in defending against a variety of different infections in palms and
    perhaps even other plants." "We suspected there was a chemical compound
    the planthopper was detecting," said Bahder. "The goal was to identify
    the chemical to see if we could use it as a bait system. The resulting
    data showed there was a much more interesting story going on and could
    lay the foundation for developing a management plan for lethal bronzing
    and perhaps other palm diseases." This marks the first documented case
    of green leaf volatiles in palms infected by the bacteria that causes
    lethal bronzing.

    For the study, Bahder and his team took leaf samples from infected
    cabbage palms, nearby threatened palm trees and healthy palm trees that
    were outside of the area with disease spread. All samples were taken
    from trees in Fort Lauderdale. Over time, they tested the plants for
    the disease among the three sets of palms and locations.

    The lethal bronzing-infected palms gave off a specific signal, whereas
    the nearby palms that were healthy responded and emitted a different
    signal. The healthy palms that were at a distance from the infected area emitted a different signal than both the infected and threatened palms.

    "The threatened palms produced a compound with known antimicrobial
    properties, and we are now interested in how this affects the epidemiology
    of lethal bronzing in the field," said Bahder. "We hope to be able to
    harness these natural plant volatiles to either treat palms directly or stimulate them to produce their own defenses." Lethal bronzing, first
    detected in Tampa in 2006, transmitted by the planthopper Haplaxius
    crudus was confirmed as the vector in 2021. For almost two decades,
    the disease has been making its way steadily across the state, creating significant casualties in Florida palms.

    "The most important thing to note is that once symptoms show up on the
    palm tree, it is too late, which is why prevention has been the first
    line of defense," said Bahder.

    Currently, when a tree has been infected, the only remedy is to remove
    it. To prevent the bacteria from spreading, the surrounding trees require sampling for phytoplasma. If the palm tests negative, then an antibiotic treatment of oxytetracycline is administered as prevention. The treatment, which is expensive, is repeated on a quarterly basis.

    With the discovery of these plant-produced compounds, scientists see
    this as a breakthrough in developing ways to manage the disease that
    could allow for harnessing the plant's own natural defenses to create
    a cure for infected plants that would eliminate the need for costly
    antibiotic treatments.

    "Scientists hope to be able to harness these compounds to develop new management strategies," said Bader.

    Next stage of the research process requires additional funding to find
    ways to use the healthy green leaf volatiles compounds that are natural
    to the palm's defense system to treat infected palms. The methods could
    involve injecting the compound directly into infected palms and hopefully curing the infected palm.

    It could also involve potentially placing dispensers or spraying areas
    of risk to stimulate the at-risk palms with natural defenses.

    "The goal is to find cost-effective ways to protect palms whether they are
    over large areas that may be at risk or individual properties. Ultimately,
    we want to cut down on time and resources for nurseries and consumers,"
    said Bahder.

    * RELATED_TOPICS
    o Plants_&_Animals
    # Endangered_Plants # Botany # Trees # Pests_and_Parasites
    o Earth_&_Climate
    # Rainforests # Geochemistry # Forest # Exotic_Species
    * RELATED_TERMS
    o Legionnaires'_disease o Maple_tree o Taiga o Vitamin_E o
    Arecaceae o Tree o Red_tide o Anthrax

    ========================================================================== Story Source: Materials provided by University_of_Florida. Original
    written by Lourdes Mederos. Note: Content may be edited for style
    and length.


    ========================================================================== Journal Reference:
    1. Jordana A. Ferreira, Jose' A. Ramos, Debora R. C. S. Dutra,
    Brandon Di
    Lella, Ericka E. Helmick, Sonia C. N. Queiroz, Brian W. Bahder.

    Identification of Green-Leaf Volatiles Released from Cabbage
    Palms (Sabal palmetto) Infected with the Lethal Bronzing
    Phytoplasma. Plants, 2023; 12 (11): 2164 DOI: 10.3390/plants12112164 ==========================================================================

    Link to news story: https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2023/05/230531150041.htm

    --- up 1 year, 13 weeks, 2 days, 10 hours, 50 minutes
    * Origin: -=> Castle Rock BBS <=- Now Husky HPT Powered! (1:317/3)