invasive disease

Agri View: Imported Invasive Disease Problems

Dan Agri View, Cotton, Soybeans

invasive disease

Stunted cotton plant infected with cotton
blue disease (arrow) surrounded by healthy plants

invasive disease

Cotton blue disease infected cotton plant
showing small, rolled down leaves and severely
stunted growth

Everett Griner talks about invasive disease problems, which have been imported through natural causes, for farmers in today’s Agri View.

Imported Invasive Disease Problems

I mentioned several times, once just recently, about farm losses from hurricanes or tornadoes that get little public invasive diseaseattention. These weather disasters can cause other losses, or problems, for farmers that are seldom made public.

For example, soybean rust. A serious problem that was brought to this country by a hurricane. Farmers can control it, but they can’t stop it. Controlling it, it can cost a lot of time and money.  I don’t know where it came from, but a hurricane was the origin of it.

More recently, a problem know as cotton blue. A virus transmitted by aphids, brought to the southern cotton farmers from Brazil….by a hurricane. When the problem is discovered, the only choice the farmer has is to begin immediate treatment which is costly, and time consuming. If he intends to produce a crop.

That’s Agri View for today. I’m Everett Griner…

Image credits: (both top feature images) Cotton blue disease (Cotton leafroll dwarf virus)/© State of New South Wales through NSW Department of Industry.

(lower right image) Soybean leaves infected with soybean rust. Photo by Christine Stone/Public Domain, Link