lol yes here I am reviewing this video for another country that does not have HLB to determine if it would be good for HLB training material or not. I smiled at that comment too.
@gadv_amv
4 ай бұрын
Hi my name is Gadiel, i'm a citric lover (from Cuba) and i've been victim of the desease. My english isnt good but i would like to add an extra to your investigation. The tree called "Neem" is a natural anti-biotic that i think you may work with. I am based in what? The past year i did an air layering to my citrus tree (red lime) and my tree is infected, the basic leaves stained yellow and not good fruits sometimes so i tried something, using an spray with water of neem leaves, i applicated it 2-3 times a week and in some time (about 3 months) the leaves of my propagated tree looks healthy again, with the natural dark green color. As i said before i'm just somebody who loves citrus, im not a scientist or medic haha so i haven"t made DNA test in my plant to detect HLB but, im sure that the treatment i did worked somehow. The neem has the property to stop the growing-propagating of bacteries. I think you can work is base to create a bactericid or something like that. I also noticed that in some time the ACP stayed away of my propagated plant (probable because of the bitter flavor that neem left behind). This is just my view point, i can't work to do my own investigation since i have nothing to work with, so i leave in your hands the working with it or not. Well a pleasure (hopefully it be useful❤🍊)
@swaminaturalfarm
5 ай бұрын
Good information
@nicoledotson225
3 жыл бұрын
Interesting topic! Resonates with readings lately on topics of monoculture decreasing resilience and the consequences of over-specialization (on many levels- from species extinction to tunnel vision, closed off mindset... I digress). Is this a big picture solution? Can we stop the bleeding now... but continue on to address solutions for a more nurturing system overall.... What pathways do our lifestyles provide? Food for thought (ba dun tsh) :P
@MrTaxiRob
3 жыл бұрын
this disease isn't about monoculture so much as human diaspora: we take our diseases with us wherever we go around the world. Kind of like the zebra mussels in the Great Lakes..
@irishfruitandberries9059
8 ай бұрын
@@MrTaxiRobdoesn’t help that’s citrus is grown in vast monocultures of the same varieties
@skybluskyblueify
3 жыл бұрын
So from here on out most citrus would have to be GMO? There's a portion of the population that would not eat these citruses --they also tend to be vegetarian --of those that are, their diet would be restricted even more. Or could the resistance genes simply be bred into a population via conventional means?
@fightingtemptationswithshe5430
3 жыл бұрын
Do you understand the power in what you just said?👍
@manaskumarbharati3353
2 жыл бұрын
Nice vedio. The problem outbreaks far reaching countries also.Regards.
@whitemale6227
2 жыл бұрын
Perhaps you should change the genome of the bacteria instead of the citrus trees.
@doomoo5365
3 жыл бұрын
They didn't mention if the disease is found in places like Texas or Florida also for even Mexico
@TheDanEdwards
3 жыл бұрын
"They didn't mention if the disease is found in places like Texas or Florida" - the video mentions Florida and how the juice industry has responded.
@doomoo5365
3 жыл бұрын
@@TheDanEdwards I used to live in northwest Florida and I remember wonderful sour orange trees
@tjandra813
3 жыл бұрын
Being a native Floridian, I disagree with California being the last place to grow citrus.
@ryannechvatal9888
2 жыл бұрын
He means the last place to grow disease free citrus
@timjim7830
2 жыл бұрын
psyllids destroyed half of florida's $10 billion orange industry in 2021 so he's kind of right...
@hiraeth1340
3 жыл бұрын
Er, "Devestated"? Not what I would expect from "University of California Television". Nobody there thought to screen this for typos before posting this? Important topic though.
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