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Officials find potato pest in East Idaho

A potato pest has been discovered in Idaho after soil tests showed positive for pale cyst nematodes which can reduce potato yields by as much as 80%. The 150-acre field has been added to the cyst nematode eradication program and makes the field the 27th field to be quarantined.

The infested fields are managed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service’s Pale Cyst Nematode Program.

“Trace work is ongoing to identify and regulate any additional fields that may have been exposed to soil from this recently detected infested field,” said program director Tina Gresham in a press release.

Gresham said the field was already under special regulations and soil samples were being taken because it was known to be associated with an infested field.

The pest was first discovered in Idaho in 2006 and has been found in a roughly 5-square-mile area of Bonneville and Bingham counties. Officials have been working to eradicate the pest, which could lead to trade problems if left unchecked.

The PCN Program currently contains 9,540 acres of regulated fields, and more than 3,000 acres are considered infested.

source: idahostatejournal.com
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