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USDA Worries About Citrus LeprosisWASHINGTON - Mar 11/04 - SNS -- USDA researchers are worried the disease citrus leprosis, a virus that substantially damaged Florida's orange crop early last century, could reappear in the United States. The mite-borne plant disease moving slowly north from South America, causing scientists at the Agricultural Research Service's Systematic Entomology Laboratory (SEL) in Beltsville, Maryland, to look hard at ways of detecting and controlling the virus' vector: flat mites of the genus Brevipalpus. SEL's mite expert, entomologist Ronald Ochoa, says the disease's presence in Central America has caught the attention of U.S. Department of Agriculture scientists at ARS and at the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS). ARS is the USDA's chief scientific research agency. The subscriber version of the article is available by Clicking here
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