Global Times

Drones to disc jockeys: India battles new wave of crop-munching locusts

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From deploying drones and fire trucks to banging utensils and blaring loud music, India is experiment­ing with ways to battle a new wave of locust attacks that have alarmed farmers.

Millions of locusts have engulfed India’s seven heartland states, including the western desert of Rajasthan, and threaten vegetable and pulse crops such as lentils and beans.

“We have never ever seen what we have in the last six months in India... never in the history,” said Bhagirath Choudhary, director of the New Delhi-based South Asia Biotechnol­ogy Centre, an agricultur­e think tank.

Farmers salvaged their wheat and oilseed crops from a previous locust scourge that started in late 2019. But the fresh swarms have arrived at a time when the government is trying to contain the spread of the coronaviru­s and reeling from economic fallout associated with pandemic restrictio­ns.

India’s lockdown – introduced in late March – has pushed millions into hunger and poverty as they lose their livelihood­s and left farmers unable to harvest, bag and move their crops because of labor shortages and logistical challenges. The country is battling its worst desert locust outbreak in decades with swarms radiating through much of the western states of Gujarat, Rajasthan and Maharashtr­a, the central states of Madhya Pradesh and Punjab, and Haryana and Uttar Pradesh in the north. States in India’s east and south have been on alert too.

The last major locust surge was in 1993, when heavy rains created favorable breeding conditions for the insects along the India-Pakistan border.

Most years the winged invaders destroy crops in parts of Rajasthan close to the border but farm experts say it is rare for them to move further into the state and other nondesert areas of India.

Their wider distributi­on in 2020 has bewildered residents and farmers, who have resorted to rudimentar­y efforts to scare the pests away.

Some have mounted their tractors with insecticid­e sprayers or banged steel pots and plates, while others have lit fireworks or played loud music on speakers in the middle of their fields.

A farmer in Uttar Pradesh rolled out a mobile disc jockey system, normally used at weddings.

‘Farmers crying’

Locust swarms can fly up to 150 kilometers a day, and the adult insects can consume roughly their own weight in fresh food each day.

A small swarm can eat enough food to feed 35,000 people in one day, according to the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO).

“Farmers are crying, they don’t know what to do... it’s like a natural disaster,” Choudhary told Reuters.

India’s state-run Locust Warning

Organizati­on, which is responsibl­e for locust survey and control operations, did not respond to comment.

On May 28, Delhi and neighborin­g districts were put on high alert for a possible locust invasion, with authoritie­s urging residents to shut their windows and doors tight.

“Farmers are advised to collective­ly beat drums, tin containers [and] steel plates and use loudspeake­rs to prevent locusts from descending on farms and damaging crops,” Suhas L.Y., the magistrate of Gautam Buddha Nagar district, said via Twitter.

Locusts have caused extensive damage to pastures and crops and threatened food security in East African countries including Somalia, Ethiopia, Kenya, Eritrea and Djibouti in 2020.

Pakistan also has faced its worst locust infestatio­n in two decades, prompting authoritie­s to declare a national emergency.

Food insecurity?

Despite large-scale incursions by the insects, the Indian government and farm experts do not foresee major crop damage for the moment as the pests have arrived during the gap between the previous harvest and the next planting season. But experts warn that federal and state government­s need to kill the pests quickly over the next few weeks to ensure they don’t breed again and then devour summer crops.

If the insects continue to multiply, India could see extensive losses in June and July when monsoon rains spur sowing of rice, sugarcane, corn, cotton and soybean crops, they said.

“The new wave of locusts could pave the way for more food insecurity, which will leave more people at risk of starvation,” said Andre Laperriere, executive director of Global Open Data for Agricultur­e and Nutrition.

Keith Cressman, senior locust forecastin­g officer at FAO, said India can expect additional waves of locust invasions until early July.

“We are not in a plague situation, but it could get much worse,” he said.

Choudhary of the South Asia Biotechnol­ogy Centre said the warnings should serve as a “wake-up call” to take more action to save crops.

Authoritie­s in the affected states have been trying to contain locust swarms by spraying chemicals, using vehicles from tractors to fire trucks, the agricultur­e ministry said in a statement on May 28. The government said it was arranging drones to drop pesticides on trees and in inaccessib­le places to kill the insects. It also plans to use helicopter­s for aerial spraying.

Up to 15 sprayers will start arriving from Britain over the next two weeks and 45 more in one and a half months, it said.

Farmer input

Farm experts said that while loud noises can briefly get rid of the pests, they do not amount to a sustainabl­e plan and can make it more difficult for authoritie­s to target and contain the pests. “It’s not killing any locusts, it’s just shifting the problem to the neighbors,” said FAO’s Cressman.

He said chemical pesticides were the cheapest and most effective solution to tackle such large numbers of insects.

Farmers can also dig trenches around their fields in an effort to trap and bury newborn hoppers that try to march in and eat their crops, he said. But he said controllin­g locusts is not a job for individual farmers but for well-trained government agencies equipped with technical know-how and the correct sprayers and safety gear.

Choudhary, however, urged the government to involve village councils and farmer communitie­s in decisions about the pests, and to provide the right knowledge, pesticides, equipment and technology to help people monitor and fight locusts.

“With limited manpower in the field, state agencies alone cannot control these intense, frequent

swarms,” he said.

 ?? Photo: AFP ?? A resident tries to fend off swarms of locusts from a mango tree in a residentia­l area of Jaipur in the Indian state of Rajasthan on May 25.
Photo: AFP A resident tries to fend off swarms of locusts from a mango tree in a residentia­l area of Jaipur in the Indian state of Rajasthan on May 25.

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