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Dieback disease killing mango trees is spreading in the NT
Key takeaways
- It's estimated up to 40,000 mango trees have been bulldozed in the last two years because of mango twig tip dieback.
- A fungal disease called mango twig tip dieback is spreading across orchards in the Darwin region of the NT.
- The chief executive of Australian Mangoes says the disease has become a "serious issue" for the industry.
Why this matters: an international story with cross-border implications worth tracking.
It's estimated up to 40,000 mango trees have been bulldozed in the last two years because of mango twig tip dieback. (Supplied: Callum Hutcheson )
A fungal disease called mango twig tip dieback is spreading across orchards in the Darwin region of the NT.
The chief executive of Australian Mangoes says the disease has become a "serious issue" for the industry.
Article preview — originally published by ABC Australia. Full story at the source.
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