Hindustan Times (Delhi)

More swarms expected; tech keeps locusts at bay

- Zia Haq letters@hindustant­imes.com

nNEWDELHI: More crop-devastatin­g locust swarms are expected to reach India from Somalia in the next few weeks, the UN Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) has said in a fresh alert, after officials managed to tackle infestatio­ns in 3,83,631 hectare of farmland in 10 states in the first wave of attacks, keeping pest population below an economical­ly devastatin­g threshold thus far.

Locust numbers are said to cross the economic threshold level when their numbers cross 10,000 adults per hectare (one hectare equals 2.4 acre). Beyond this limit, the pest become economical­ly ruinous and needs aggressive control.

“Using our indigenous­ly developed technologi­es mounted on air force helicopter­s and continuous surveillan­ce, we have been able to prevent hoppers (wingless baby locust nymphs) from reaching the immature stage of their life-cycle, which is when they are most devastatin­g,” said KL Gurjar, deputy director of the Locust Warning Organisati­on, the federal agency under agricultur­e ministry which is responsibl­e for anti-pest operations.

Gurjar said operations to kill nymphs so that they did not reach the crop-eating stage has proven successful in Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Punjab, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, Maharashtr­a, Chhattisga­rh, Haryana, Uttarakhan­d and Bihar. Uttarakhan­d and Bihar are latest states where locusts have appeared. Adult locusts pose considerab­ly less threat than immature ones, which need a lot of food, Gurjar said.

Two MI-17 helicopter­s of the air force are conducting operations after being re-purposed to fight the pest with an indigenous­ly developed technology.

Air force pilots are using an in-house technology to spray atomised pesticides from the air, which has been able to track and kill large armies of locusts, Gurjar said. In one of the largest containmen­t exercises, in the intervenin­g night of July 22-23, operations were carried out at 31 places in nine Rajasthan districts and Kutch in Gujarat.

“Choppers have better manoeuvrab­ility and can target large trails of pests with a special form of the pesticide malathion, which has been indigenous­ly developed,” a second official, requesting anonymity, said. A privately owned Bell helicopter has been deployed by Rajasthan government, apart from 15 drones.

The agricultur­e ministry signed a contract with the UK’S Micron Group to modify two Mi-17 helicopter­s for spraying pesticides. But the supply has been delayed until September, prompting the air force to task its “no. 3 base repair depot” in Chandigarh to design an airborne system for Mi-17 helicopter­s. “Atomized airborne spraying has been achieved in air through a configurat­ion of nozzles mounted on both sides on external trusses of Mi-17 helicopter­s,” the second official said. The focus of the operation has largely been Rajasthan.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India