Skip to Content
sitenum=142
Green news from the UC Division of Agriculture and Natural Resources
Hills
Comments:
by Michael
on December 14, 2015 at 5:00 PM
Have they tried high intensity steaming of the tree to kill the bacterium, similar to Citrus Greening in Florida
by Jerrold Turney
on May 11, 2017 at 8:59 AM
Olive leaf scorch is common and wide spread in So. CA. I first saw dying olive trees at the Adamson House Stat Park in Malibu in 2001. I collected 11 samples and submitted them to the CDFA Plant Pest Diagnostic Lab in Sacramento. Seven were positive for X. fastidiosa and all the olives died at the park. I see dead and dying olive everywhere in S. CA. It is also killing Liquidambar, Oleander, Plum and Crape Myrtle.  
 
Jerrold Turney Ph.D.  
Senior Biologist/Plant Pathologist  
Dept. of Agricultural Commissioner/Weights and Measures  
County of Los Angeles  
562 622-0433
by Richard Bumann
on April 27, 2019 at 1:16 PM
In 2010 our 124 year old mission olive began to die. First noticed leaf scorching then branch die back. Sent sample to state lab who found it tested positive for Xylella Fastidiosa. Within a year the tree was dead. We were heartsick. But then the tree started growing suckers. I assumed they would also die from XF. But now nine years later the suckers are 8 ft. tall and show no signs of leaf scorching. Is it possible, If I selected one or two well developed suckers, (and cut the rest back) they may grow into a mature tree and our 1886 olive may once again grow?
 
Leave a Reply:

You are currently not signed in. If you have an account, then sign in now!
Anonymous users messages may be delayed.
 

Security Code:
JZHQYJ