Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Locusts arrive in Guj from Somalia via Pak

- Jayashree Nandi

NEW DELHI: A relatively small swarm of crop-eating locusts has arrived in Gujarat’s Bhuj from Somalia via Pakistan, Union agricultur­e ministry’s Locust Warning Organisati­on (LWO) said on Wednesday and added authoritie­s were trying to prevent to it from moving to Rajasthan and other surroundin­g areas by spraying insecticid­es.

“They may have come with the winds across the Indian Ocean to the Pakistan coast and then from there to Bhuj. We will control the [locust] population in Bhuj. Other swarms may also travel across the ocean in the coming days. There are two possibilit­ies—they can migrate from Somalia to Yemen and then migrate from Yemen to Pakistan and reach the border areas, the other is direct migration across the ocean,” said LWO deputy director KL Gurjar.

India has faced its worst desert locust invasions in decades this year and prompted the government to deploy helicopter­s and drones for spraying insecticid­e. The Centre has amended rules to allow state government­s to use drones at night to help neutralise the locusts. The infestatio­n has not caused much damage to crops. The kharif, or summersown crops, are vulnerable but Gurjar said their efforts to control the locusts have been intensifie­d following FAO’S warnings.

UN’S Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on (FAO) on Monday warned the migration of locust swarms from Somalia to their summer breeding areas along both sides of the India-pakistan border was imminent. More swarms were likely to form in Somalia in the coming weeks and India and Pakistan have been accordingl­y warned.

The summer breeding has commenced along both sides of the border, where numerous swarms are present mainly in Rajasthan. Hatching and band formation will increase during July in Rajasthan and Gujarat as well as adjacent areas of Tharparkar, Nara and Cholistan deserts in Pakistan, FAO has said.

Gurjar said the breeding has begun in otherwise arid Rajasthan as the state has received good rains. “We are trying to control the population through insecticid­es before they start egg-laying. [If] we do not manage to do that, then we try to control their population in the hopper stage before they start flying. Monsoon rains and maturity of locusts in India have coincided. The locusts are yellow in colour indicating their maturity and breeding potential,” said Gurjar.

India Meteorolog­ical Department director-general M Mohapatra said the wind direction is south-westerly during the ongoing monsoon and that is why locust migration can happen from that direction.

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