MIAMI(AP)
The sabal palm, Florida's state tree, is under attack by a
microscopic killer that has scientists stumped. An unknown but
growing number of sabal palms in the Tampa Bay area have died from
a mysterious disease that researchers are struggling to identify.
Even after scientists pinpoint the disease _ and that could take
years _ they will have to learn what insect spreads it. The disease
will be tough to stop.
"It's not simply a matter that we will be able to
eradicate," said Monica Elliott, a University of Florida plant
pathologist. "That's not very likely."
Sabal palms, also known cabbage palms, can grow to 50 feet. In
the United States, they can be found from the Florida Keys to parts
of North Carolina and can grow in marshes, woodlands or along the
coastline. The palm, which is also South Carolina's state tree,
is featured in Florida's state seal and was designated the
state tree in the 1950s.
Tim Schubert, an administrator and pathologist in Florida's
Division of Plant Industry, said it's impossible to say what
the disease's eventual effect on the state's sabal palms
will be but "it's not going to be good."
"There's going to be fewer palms. They may present a
less attractive tree in nature because of this new disease showing
up," he said.
This is not the first time iconic Florida trees have been
ravaged by disease. The state's orange and other citrus trees
are being attacked by canker and greening. Scientists have been
unable to stop either.
The new disease destroys the sabal palm and its other victims,
which include Canary Island date palms and queen palms, from
within. It's a tough diagnosis, Elliott said, often confused
with nutrient deficiencies or excessive trimming. First to go are
the lower leaves in the tree's canopy, followed by a dead spear
leaf. Finally, the palm's canopy collapses.
Understanding how the disease spreads requires a trip back to
high school science class.
This is a phytoplasma disease, which means it is a very small
bacterium that doesn't have a cell wall. And it can only be
transmitted through a plant's phloem, a type of transport
tissue similar to veins in a human. The disease has likely found
its way to sabal palms' phloem by either a tree- or
leaf-hopping insect.
The disease is hitting the state during a tight budget year and
University of Florida research funding has taken a hit. Officials
can still turn to federal and private grants, and a proposal to dip
into a small emergency fund is being considered, said Jack
Battenfield, a spokesman for UF's Institute of Food and
Agricultural Sciences.
"We don't have some of the freedoms we might have had
before," Battenfield said. "The budget's tighter.
We've got to look at things we can do most effectively, most
efficiently, and have the biggest impact."
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On the Net:
UF Fort Lauderdale Research and Education Center:
http://flrec.ifas.ufl.edu/
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