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Meet the disease-sniffing dogs out to save Florida’s orange crop from a deadly bacteria

Florida is using dogs to sniff out a bacteria that is killing citrus trees.

Mira’s nose is really sensitive that they can smell sick citrus trees, and U.S. orange growers are hoping her super sniffer can help combat one of the biggest threats ever for their crop.

The government has trained 10 dogs including Mira – a 32- month-old German Shepherd-Belgian Malinois mix – to recognize a bacteria that has been killing citrus trees for a decade in Florida, the biggest domestic producer. Much like canine teams that sniff out bombs, drugs as well as bed bugs, this one is searching for any disease referred to as citrus greening. There’s no cure, but growers hope the animals will give them additional time to find one by slowing the contagion.

Florida’s orange harvest is forecast to reach a 52-year low this season, down 71 per cent since 2004 as tiny bugs called Asian citrus psyllids spread the bacteria. It cost the citrus industry US$7.8 billion and seven,500 jobs since 2006. Dogs, with 50 times more scent receptors in their noses than humans, sense chemicals that trees emit when infected. They’re accurate 99.7 per cent of times – much better than laboratory tests – and identify diseased trees before symptoms appear.

Joe Raedle/Getty Images

“They’re virtually the forefront of early detection for us right now,” said Yindra Dixon, a public affairs specialist for the Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service, one from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.

While researchers have didn’t look for a remedy for the disease, also known by the scientific name Huanglongbing, they devised ways to slow its spread. One technique requires farmers to encase trees in steam to overheat the bacteria without killing the plant. Some apply nutrients on the leaves to help keep trees productive even as they’re dying. Others use more pesticides to kill the psyllids, but the downside is the bugs developed resistance to some chemicals and an excessive amount of can burn the fruit. Penicillin can suppress the bacteria, but concerns over antibiotic resistance have limited wider use.

Citrus greening blocks the passage of nutrients through the tree’s vascular system, resulting in the plant to thin and yellow. Trees may take years to die, but their fruit production declines and finally is too promising small to justify the fee for treating the symptoms.

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