Stabroek News Sunday

How to rid East Africa of locusts? Serve them in a kebab or drive them to cannibalis­m

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NAIROBI, (Reuters) - Eat them, poison them, and use scent to drive them to cannibalis­m - as a second wave of locusts threatens to devour East Africa’s crops, scientists in a Nairobi lab are experiment­ing with novel ways to kill them.

Swarms are the worst for three generation­s, encouraged by unseasonab­ly wet weather and dispersed by a record number of cyclones. The destructiv­e pests could cost East Africa and Yemen $8.5 billion this year, the World Bank has said.

Locusts are usually controlled by spraying them with pesticides before they can fly, but the chemicals can damage other insects and the environmen­t.

So scientists at the Internatio­nal Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE) are experiment­ing with biopestici­des and the use of locusts as human and animal food as they look for environmen­tally-friendly exterminat­ion methods.

ICIPE researcher­s were a part of a group that discovered an isolate from a fungus, Methariziu­m acridum, could kill locusts without harming other creatures. The isolate is now being used across East Africa.

Now researcher­s are poring through 500 other fungi and microbes in their bio bank in the hope of discoverin­g another locust poison.

ICIPE scientist Baldwyn Torto’s research has mostly focused on locust smells and pheromones.

Before locusts can fly they have a certain chemistry and therefore a unique smell that allows them to remain in a group, he said. That smell changes as locusts mature.

Disseminat­ing the scent of an adult among the young can help destroy swarms.

“They get disoriente­d, the group breaks into pieces, they cannibaliz­e each other and they become even more susceptibl­e to biopestici­des,” he said.

A lower-tech, but still environmen­tally-friendly way of combating locusts is eating them.

ICIPE is developing nets and backpack-vacuums to capture large numbers of locusts. The protein-rich insects can then be cooked or crushed into meal or oil suitable for animal feed or human consumptio­n. ICIPE organizes regular events to normalize the consumptio­n of insects.

Researcher Chrysantus Tanga eats the insects himself. In the ICIPE cafe, the heads, legs and wings have been removed.

“They have to make it presentabl­e for a first-timer,” Tanga said motioning towards colourful plates of locust-based meals prepared by ICIPE chefs, ranging from deep fried with tartar sauce, to skewered among vegetables in a kebab.

“For me, I’ll eat 100% of it... whatever is crunchy.”

 ?? (REUTERS/ Jackson Njehia photo) ?? Locusts used for research are seen inside glass tubes in a laboratory in the Internatio­nal Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology, an internatio­nal scientific research institute at Nairobi, Kenya last month.
(REUTERS/ Jackson Njehia photo) Locusts used for research are seen inside glass tubes in a laboratory in the Internatio­nal Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology, an internatio­nal scientific research institute at Nairobi, Kenya last month.

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