Lethal Bronzing Set To Devastate Florida Palm Trees

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In this July 1, 2015 file photo, Marvin Hernandez, right, and Kelly Vera sit in the shade of a palm tree, in Key Biscayne, Fla. (AP Photo/J Pat Carter, File)

by Peter Lake

You can’t go to Florida without seeing hundreds of the Sunshine State’s ubiquitous palms.  Florida’s iconic trees are under attack from a deadly disease that changes them to dried crisps within months, and once they fall ill there is no chance for recovery.

The disease is spread by a rice-sized, plant-hopping insect. Lethal bronzing has gone from a small infestation on Florida’s Gulf Coast to a nearly statewide problem in just over a decade.

Tens of thousands of palm trees have died from the bacterial disease, and the pace of its spread is increasing, adding to environmental woes of a state already struggling to save its other arboreal icon, citrus trees, from two other diseases.

If nothing is done, “I don’t think all the palm trees will die, but the issue we see will get a lot worse before it gets better,” says Brian Bahder, an entomologist who studies insect-borne plant diseases and is a leader in the state’s battle against lethal bronzing.

The AP explains the situation:

  • Lethal bronzing’s first Florida appearance came near Tampa in 2006, but it’s now found from the Keys in the south to Jacksonville in the north.
  • The disease is transmitted solely by the haplaxius crudus, a tiny winged insect sometimes called the American palm cixiid or, generically, a treehopper. These specific treehoppers (there are other kinds) inject the bacteria through their saliva when feasting on the sap from a palm’s leaves. Any palm cixiid that later feeds from the tree will pick up the infection and pass the bacteria to more palms.
  • Once inside a tree, the bacteria migrate to its base, multiplying until they clog the circulatory system—much like human arteries getting blocked by fat and cholesterol. The blockage makes it impossible for the tree’s cells to get sufficient nutrients and sugars, starving them.
  • As an infected tree dies, its fronds and central spear leaf transform from green to a tell-tale shade of bronze as it succumbs in about six months. The disease doesn’t infect humans or animals.
  • Genetic testing shows lethal bronzing likely originated in Mexico’s Yucatan region. Bahder’s hypothesis is that 2005’s Hurricane Wilma, which tracked from the Yucatan to Florida, or a storm with a similar path carried infected treehoppers across the gulf to Tampa.
  • Some worry lethal bronzing will migrate to California and Arizona, infecting date palms and damaging that fruit crop. The disease has already heavily damaged Jamaica’s coconut plantations, and Brazil is taking preventive measures to avoid invasion.
  • The problem is much bigger than this treehopper. The Guardian reports some 450 pests “that damage or feed on trees” have entered the US from foreign shores, with new research indicating 40% of our forests are vulnerable to them.

In case you missed it: Solving Climate Change Could Be A Matter of Planting Trees

About Post Author

Peter Lake

Peter Lake hails from the Midwest, but is now living in Germany. He is a professional writer who spent many years honing his craft at a well known newspaper. Peter originally sent an article to us through the citizen journalist program and decided to stay. We are glad he did.
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4 years ago

In 18 years I think I can see the descent from paradise to pest hole with my own eyes. Of course “paradise” isn’t really something that exists, but Florida has been the victim both of experiments in changing the landscape and flora most of which have been disastrous. After WW II it seems everyone wanted to sell it as the South Pacific and what was sand dune and pine forest and live oak became imported palm trees. Exotic “pets” exotic plants, the draining of wetlands for agriculture have all contributed. Only a bit of the Everglades are still intact and are devoid of most species that formerly lived there.

Invasive insects are part of the problem. I don’t know where these bugs came from. The biting red ants I’ve struggled with came from a load of lumber, I think. I’m sure nobody brought them in on purpose, but where Man goes, things die. It’s been happening for hundreds of thousands of years. I’m sure it’s too late to stop it. I will be sad to see the Sabal Plametto go. They’re the state tree for some reason, but the Roystonia, the Washingtonia, the Syagrus or “queen” palm came from elswhere. Just like the people who live here. Someday we’ll all be gone.

Mark Willis
4 years ago

I live in Florida and last year 8 of my royals died from bronzing.

Admin
4 years ago

It’s never-ending and although climate change isn’t mentioned, and we shouldn’t blame everything on it, I can’t help but think there’s a connection.

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