Locusts have a field day in starving Africa
July 19 2004 at 06:12PM
Dakar - In an invasion of north and west Africa
that may take on biblical proportions, locusts are swarming across the Sahara
desert to threaten the yields from crops already wizened by years of drought in
many of the world's poorest countries.
The United Nations's Food and Agriculture Organization announced July 5 that the
first swarms of desert locusts were abandoning their spring breeding areas and
heading into Mauritania, Senegal and Mali, with more expected in coming weeks.
Without immediate attention to the plague of locusts, FAO warned, entire fields
of maize, cassava and other staple crops for the region will be razed to the
ground by the pests' insatiable appetites.
The swarms, which can devour in a twinkling enough
food to feed 2 500 people, could make their way across west Africa into
Niger, Chad and western Sudan, which is already facing a dire food shortage due
to continued unrest in the Darfur region.
"It's only just begun," Ousseynou Diop of Senegal's agriculture
ministry said, hearkening back to the last major locust invasions that hit
Senegal in 1986 and 1993.
While Senegal suffered little crop damage in the past invasions, the country is
not well prepared to fend off the swarms, which are due to arrive at a
particularly crucial time in the growing season.
"They used to come after harvest time, around November, but this year they
are landing right in time for planting season," he said. "They could
devour everything, all of the seedlings - it could be a catastrophe."
From 1987 to 1989, swarms of locusts stuffed themselves with what amounted to
about $300-million in damages to food production in north and west Africa, the
FAO has said.
Swarm-watching has become a necessary, if repulsive,
pastime for many farmers, who have spotted locusts chomping on maize and sorghum
in eastern Senegal in the Bakel region, agriculture chief Mandian Waly has told
local media.
Locusts have also had a field day in Algeria, devouring thousands of hectares of
newly planted crops in recent weeks in the fertile zone that runs from Naama in
the west to Tebessa in the east that separates the country's north from the
creeping Sahara desert.
Morocco has seen swarms engulf more than 100 000 hectares since late last
month, while Mauritania's pest control agency has reported that hoards of
locusts have swarmed southwards through the massive north-west African country
since early July, preparing to lay their eggs just as the rainy season arrives.
Though they normally favor the southern Sahara in their laying season, the
locusts could return with a vengeance in September, Algeria's Agriculture
Minister Said Barkat said, as their laying and hatching cycles are enhanced by
the rains that are normally a boon to the dry region.
Locusts are impervious to treatment once they reach their chrysalis stage,
Senegal's Diop explained, so even the three million hectares across the Maghreb
that have been treated with conventional pesticides to ward off the pests are
vulnerable.
Results from field trials of biological pesticides, which are substantially less
harmful to the environment and to human health, are still pending.
Senegal President Abdoulaye Wade has taken the lead in mounting a regional
onslaught against the locust infestations, calling last week on the world's most
developed countries, the G8, to take up the battle against the pests.
Without urgent and sustained attention to the problem, he warned, the locusts
could sound a death knell for millions of people in a region already plagued
with rampant malnutrition.
SOURCE: IOL