Monday, June 22, 2020

East Africa And West Asia Conitnue to Combat Surging Locust Outbreak

A desert locust swarm flies in Kipsing, Kenya, in March 2020.Sven Torfinn / FAO

NBC: A plague amid a pandemic: East Africa, West Asia combat surging locust outbreak

The U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization estimates 450 billion pests have been killed since January, but the battle against the massive, crop-destroying swarms is far from over.

When the skies darkened suddenly over Michael Gatiba's 10-acre farm in Nakuru County, Kenya, what came pouring down stunned him: millions of desert locusts.

"It was like a storm," Gatiba, 45, said by telephone. "It was like hail. They covered everywhere. Even there was no sun."

That was three months ago. Although Gatiba said he was lucky that the damage from the insects was minimal, he fears that the outbreak that has plagued swaths of Africa, the Middle East and Asia for the past two years will return to ravage his maize and bean crops.

Read more ....

WNU Editor: I have been told by some readers in east Africa that the videos do not do justice to how incredible these swarms really are.

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

The US had locusts. Most of them They died out. I've been told that farmers manage insects by mowing the stubble after the corn is harvested.

Recommendations for Managing Corn Residue at Harvest

I guess the real answer is that it depends on what the problems are for a field (volunteer corn, insects, erosion, ...) It is harder than Bloomberg lets on.

Andrew Jackson said...

Repent sinners!

Anonymous said...

build a wall