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DISEASE CLINIC

 
The ARP at FABI offers a disease clinic to avocado growers for the identification of avocado diseases. A consultation fee will be charged accordingly.
 

 

 How to sample?

  • Take a photo of the symptoms, if possible
  • Samples should be taken from 4-5 randomly selected plants in an infection site.
  • Place the samples separately in a paper bag (Never use a plastic bag!!)
  • Seal the bag and label with the following: Collectors name, date, sample number, locality and cultivar
 

Specific tissue sampling

 
Leaves
  • Collect individual leaves, place between blotting paper (paper towel) and in an envelope
 
Stems/Branches
  • Collect a sample that spans the diseased area, including +/- 2cm of healthy tissue on either side of the lesion
  • Place in a paper bag
 
Roots/Soil
  • Collect 200g of soil from under the diseased tree at a depth of 10-15 cm, place in a paper bag
  • Collect root pieces (healthy and diseased) from the soiland place in an envelope
 
 
Send the samples by fast mail or courier to the Avocado Disease Clinic @ FABI and give us a phone call to let us know to expect a parcel from you.
 
 
Prof Noëlani van den Berg
 
74 Lunnon street
Avocado Research Programme
FABI
University of Pretoria
Pretoria
0001
 
012 420 3856

082 775 4983

 

New Publications

Townsend G, Hill M, Hurley BP, Roets F. (2026) Native Scolytinae and Platypodinae beetle assemblages in indigenous South African forests and their co-occurrence with the invasive PSHB beetle. Journal of Insect Conservation 30 10.1007/s10841-026-00779-8
Botha I, Maduna SN, Hagen SB, Lall N, Berger DK. (2026) 3RAD-guided SNP discovery for species identification and conservation of the medicinal southern African tree Genus Greyia Hook. & Harv.. Ecology and Evolution 16(5):e73412, 1-29. 10.1002/ece3.73412
Balocchi F, Duncan G, Yilmaz N, Wingfield MJ, Paap T. (2026) The critically endangered geophyte Gladiolus aureus threatened by a wilt disease associated with Fusarium libertatis. Journal of Plant Pathology 10.1007/s42161-026-02227-7 PDF
Bose T, Wingfield MJ. (2026) Plantations are invasive pathogen bridgeheads—response to Li et al.. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 10.1016/j.tree.2026.05.006
Jamieson B-A, Paap T, Pegg GS, Carnegie AJ, Wingfield MJ, Roux J, Hardy GEStJ, Drenth A, Hammerbacher A, Bose T. (2026) Quambalaria spp.: Emerging Tree Pathogens of Concern. Current Forestry Reports 12:13. 10.1007/s40725-026-00274-y