Hindustan Times (Bathinda)

Rainfall favourable for breeding of locusts

- Jayashree Nandi letters@hindustant­imes.com ■

NEWDELHI: GOOD rainfall in Rajasthan, other parts of northwest India, and cyclone Nisarga forming over the Arabian Sea will create favourable conditions for the breeding of desert locusts along the India-pakistan border but temporaril­y stall their movement as well, Centre’s Locust Warning Organisati­on (LWO) said.

“If there are good rains in Rajasthan, they will stay in the desert region and not move away, and if mature swarms come, they will breed here in the next 15 to 30 days depending on weather conditions,” said LWO deputy director K L Gurjar.

Locust swarms reached new locations, chomped through vegetation and crops across farmlands in Punjab, Madhya Pradesh, Maharashtr­a, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh and Chhattisga­rh and prompted the Centre to issue a warning to 16 states last week. “They are presently in Madhya Pradesh’s Shivpuri area and moving towards Ashok Nagar, Bikaner and Nagaur in Rajasthan, Nagpur in Maharashtr­a and Jhansi in Uttar Pradesh. They are unlikely to move towards Bihar,” said Gurjar. He added LWO controlled a new swarm that entered Jaisalmer on Sunday.

Locust swarms pose a severe risk to India’s agricultur­e this year, the UN has warned, and prompted the authoritie­s to step up vigil, and deploy drones and other equipment to detect their movement. Their attacks are known to cause a considerab­le drop in agricultur­al output. A one-square-kilometre swarm can eat as much food as 35,000 people.

R K Jenamani, a senior scientist at the National Weather Forecastin­g Centre, said the formation of any cyclonic circulatio­n over the Arabian Sea brings moisture into north India and causes rain. “We are expecting thundersto­rm and rainfall activity in east Rajasthan and in Delhi NCR on June 4 and 5. It has already been raining in parts of east Rajasthan,” he said.

Northwest India is expected to receive excess monsoon rainfall at 107% of the long-period average this year, according to India Meteorolog­ical Department (IMD). Excess monsoon rains will also provide favourable conditions for the breeding of locusts in arid areas.

According to the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO), moist sandy or sand/clay soil to depths of 10-15 cm below the surface, some bare areas for egg-laying, and green vegetation for hopper developmen­t are the favourable conditions for their breeding.

LWO has said it has controlled swarms over 55,000 ha across Rajasthan, UP and MP.

According to FAO’S update dated May 27, locust swarms are forming in the spring breeding areas and migrating east to the India-pakistan border ahead of the monsoon.

Several successive waves of swarms can be expected until July in Rajasthan with eastward surges across India as far as Bihar and Odisha followed by westward movements and a return to Rajasthan based on changing monsoon winds. These movements will cease as swarms begin to breed and become less mobile. Swarms are less likely to reach south India, FAO said.

 ?? PTI ?? A locust swarm Bikaner on May 30. ■
PTI A locust swarm Bikaner on May 30. ■

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