Huanglongbing (HLB, or citrus greening disease) affects all citrus varieties worldwide. In the United States, Asia, and South America, the causal agent is ‘ Candidatus Liberibacter asiaticus’ ( CLas), a phloem-limited, uncultured alphaproteobacterium. The hemipteran insect vector Diaphorina citri (Asian citrus psyllid) acquires and transmits CLas in a circulative, propagative manner. In addition to CLas, D. citri hosts multiple symbiotic bacterial species including Wolbachia (wDi). In D. citri, wDi has been sequenced and studied, but specific roles in D. citri biology are unknown. Using well-established quantitative PCR methods, we measured CLas titer in D. citri collected from four groves in central Florida with distinct HLB management strategies and tested whether CLas and wDi titer were correlated in a subset of these insects. Grove site had the largest effect on CLas titer. Sex had no effect on CLas titer, whereas a higher wDi titer was correlated with noninfected insects. Our results suggest that more directed follow-up research is necessary and important to clarify whether field management tactics influence CLas titer in D. citri and to better understand gene-by-environment interactions among D. citri, wDi, and CLas. Now that millions of trees in Florida have been treated with injectable formulations of oxytetracycline, which is likely to decrease bacterial populations in D. citri, this study may represent the last biologically meaningful snapshot of grove-level vector-pathogen ecology in the state during the HLB epidemic.