Hindustan Times (Patiala)

7 Hry dists on alert as locusts approach state’s borders

- Rajesh Moudgil rajesh.moudgil@hindustant­imes.com ■

EMERGENCY RESPONSE TEAMS FORMED IN FATEHABAD, HISAR, SIRSA, CHARKHI DADRI, BHIWANI, REWARI, MAHENDERGA­RH; INSECTICID­ES STOCKS SUPPLIED

CHANDIGARH: With the reports of locusts entering some pockets of neighbouri­ng Punjab and Rajasthan, the Haryana government has put on alert its seven bordering districts — Sirsa, Fatehabad, Hisar, Bhiwani, Charkhi Dadri, Rewari and Mahenderga­rh — and asked the administra­tions to take all-out preventive and remedial steps.

Locusts are short-horned grasshoppe­rs with migratory habit, marked polymorphi­sm (genetic variation within a population) and feed voraciousl­y on crops and vegetation­s.

According to latest reports, locust swarms have already been reported entering Phulon Chadha and Panniwala Morka villages of Sirsa district.

Additional chief secretary, agricultur­e, Sanjeev Kaushal said the state government which was in a constant touch with the Centre’s locust control unit in Jodhpur as well as its Punjab counterpar­t, agreed locusts were reportedly moving towards the districts bordering Rajasthan and Punjab.

He said the government has authorised deputy commission­ers to form farmers’ groups, give them advisories and supply the required insecticid­es with up to 100% subsidy. The local administra­tion has also been supplied stocks of the required insecticid­es, he added.

Locusts swarms are said to be a rare phenomenon as India has not witnessed any full-blown locust cycles after 1962, though in 1978 and 1993, large-scale upsurges were observed, senior Haryana agricultur­e department officials said, adding that localised locust breeding has also been reported and controlled in 1998, 2002, 2005, 2007 and 2010.

The situation remained normal and no major breeding and swarm formation has been reported in this part of the country after that. Such swarms were last spotted in Rajasthan, Punjab and bordering villages of Haryana in February this year, though no crop loss was reported.

PREVENTION & REMEDY

Besides insecticid­es, locusts also can be prevented from settling on crops and vegetation­s by beating drums/making loud noise. Since swarms settle towards sunset, insecticid­es sprayed in night or early morning decimate them.

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