USA - Weed control effort seeks to curb virus threat for Salinas Valley’s lettuce

11.01.2024 589 views

Monterey County has enacted a mandatory abatement program for select weeds as part of an effort to contain the impatiens necrotic spot virus, or INSV, which has severely impacted the region’s lettuce crop in recent years.

Officials are urging residents who notice any of the 10 most important weed hosts of the virus growing near lettuce production areas to report the sighting to the county agricultural commissioner.

The agricultural commissioner will investigate the sighting. If inspectors find one of the 10 suspect weeds, the virus and the insects that vector it, they will serve the property owner with notice to abate the nuisance.

“If the property owner doesn’t abate the weeds, the agricultural commissioner can abate the weed and bill the owner,” said Hannah Wallis, a Monterey County agricultural programs biologist.

Wallis discussed the ongoing weed abatement program during a pest management meeting held by the University of California Cooperative Extension in Salinas in December.

Monterey County farmers in 2022 suffered an estimated $150 million in crop losses as INSV, which is spread by thrips, moved from field to field in the Salinas Valley.

The county normally harvests 100,000 acres of lettuce valued at $1.2 billion. Last year, exceptionally wet and cold conditions from atmospheric river storms resulted in a dramatic reduction in INSV infections. But lettuce growers suffered an additional $54.4 million in losses from the storms.

INSV on lettuce causes yellowing and stunting and can make the crop unfit for market. Management is difficult because the virus has hundreds of crop and weed hosts and is easily spread by western flower thrips after they feed on an infected plant.

The 10 suspect weeds on the zero-tolerance list are common purslane, lambsquarter, field bindweed, shepherd’s purse, nettleleaf goosefoot, hairy fleabane, annual sowthistle, malva and burning nettle.

In a statement, the agricultural commissioner’s office said, “Getting rid of these 10 plants in non-crop areas near lettuce production is critical to protect next year’s lettuce crop from INSV.”

The most critical time to control the weeds is during the lettuce-free period adopted decades ago to manage lettuce mosaic virus.

The period from Dec. 7 to Dec. 21 — when no lettuce can be aboveground in the county — has been enough to control another lettuce threat, the mosaic virus. But INSV remains a concern due to its ability to spread from host weeds commonly found in Monterey County.

“The best thing we can do to minimize INSV is to take advantage of the lettuce-free period to control weed hosts,” Wallis said.

Fourteen reports of the weeds have been made to the agricultural commissioner’s office in 2023, and all of them have been resolved voluntarily. Some of the sightings have been on ground owned by Monterey County, the cities of Salinas and Gonzales, Caltrans and Union Pacific, officials said.

While INSV has been widespread in the Salinas Valley in recent years, sometimes with severe impact, it has been relatively mild in 2023.

“We’ve had very little INSV this year,” said Jennifer Clarke, California Leafy Greens Research program executive director. “This is probably due to our cold, wet winter and cool summer.”

This virus was first detected on Central Coast lettuce in 2006. Since 2018 it has frequently destroyed entire fields of the crop. Weed control and research to develop varieties with genetic resistance may be key to long-term management.

Researchers from the UC and the U.S. Department of Agriculture are working with lettuce growers on crop breeding trials aimed at diminishing the threat.

“Genetic resistance is the most economical and environmentally sound control method,” the USDA Agricultural Research Service reported in a research summary, “but only partial resistance to INSV has been identified.”

Source - https://salinasvalleytribune.com

28.04.2026

Philippines seeks 500 million USD for engineered bamboo development

The project is currently at the concept stage, with feasibility studies expected to take five to six months and overall preparation about a year. Implementation could begin in 2027, pending loan approval.

28.04.2026

Insurance compensation of 186,000 manats paid to tobacco farmers in Azerbaijan

To date, 186,000 manats of insurance compensation have been paid to farmers and farms in the tobacco industry in Azerbaijan.

28.04.2026

USA - Climate Disasters Are Straining Hawaii’s Insurance System

Frequent and costly disasters are driving up premiums and leaving many properties uninsured or underinsured. 

28.04.2026

Brazil - São Paulo releases R$400 million in rural credit in a record package for farmers, agricultural insurance, machinery, and land regularization

The package announced at Agrishow in Ribeirão Preto combines rural credit, agricultural insurance, land tenure regularization, mechanization, inclusion of women, innovation, and environmental actions, with R$ 455 million in investments aimed at strengthening São Paulo’s agribusiness.

28.04.2026

When will Moldovan authorities announce a call for applications for subsidizing agrarian insurance?

To date, the MAIA Ministry of Agriculture and Food Industry has not yet announced the start of the next stage of accepting applications for subsidies under agricultural risk insurance contracts concluded in the fall and winter period. While waiting for this announcement, some insurance companies are being "restrained" in the agricultural segment - they insure only livestock farms and perennial crop plantations of their regular customers.

28.04.2026

USA - USDA just doubled disaster payments, and gave farmers until August 12

SDRP disaster payment farmers 2026 just got a major upgrade. Agriculture Secretary Brooke Rollins announced on April 24 in Higginsville, Missouri that USDA is raising the Supplemental Disaster Relief Program payment factor from 35 percent to 70 percent. 

27.04.2026

India - Crop Ruined by Parrots is 'Damage by Wild Animals', says HC; Gives Relief

Holding that citizens cannot be forced to bear losses caused by protected wild animals, the Nagpur Bench of the Bombay High Court has ruled that denying compensation to a farmer merely because parrots were omitted from a government list would breach principles of equality. 

27.04.2026

The World Bank: Agri-risk management in Bulgaria

CAP has steered Bulgarian agriculture toward greater resilience, but the sector continues to suffer from an absence of a comprehensive risk management strategy and limited research on internal and external risks, the report concludes.