Iran Daily

Satellites warn African farmers of pest infestatio­ns

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UK researcher­s developed an early warning system to prevent the crops of African farmers from being devastated.

The Pest Risk Informatio­n Service (PRISE) combines temperatur­e data and weather forecasts with computer models, BBC reported.

It then sends farmers a mobile phone alert so that they can take precaution­s. It is hoped that the system will boost yields and increase farm incomes by up to 20 percent.

PRISE is being used in Kenya, Ghana and Zambia and will be rolled out soon in other parts of the world.

PRISE is an upgrade of a highly successful UK Aid scheme run by the Center for Agricultur­e and Bioscience Internatio­nal (CABI) developmen­t charity. It uses a network of so called “plant doctors” and clinics to advise farmers when pests or diseases destroy their crops.

The “doctors” draw on a database using an an app to help them diagnose the issue and then prescribe the right pesticide and other measures. Walter Wafula, who grows Maize in Bungoma in Kenya, told BBC that the service had transforme­d his family’s lives. “Because of the increased income from my farm, my kids can now go to a better school and the life at home has improved because I can provide the basic needs for my family,” he said.

So far, the scheme has helped 18.3 million farmers, in 34 countries across Africa, Asia and the Americas. On average farm incomes and yields are 13 percent higher for those using the service.

But Professor Charlotte Watts, a chief scienti¿c adviser for the UK’S Department for Internatio­nal Developmen­t, which funds the plant doctor scheme, said a new initiative with CABI and the UK Space Agency (UKSA) will use the network to prevent, rather than just mitigate infestatio­ns.

She said the idea is to use satellite data collected by the UKSA to develop a system that is able to predict when pest infestatio­ns will strike a week or more in advance.

Satellites can provide accurate land temperatur­e informatio­n, which is one of the most important drivers of pest infestatio­ns. This, combined with weather data and computer models, can be used to give farmers enough time to spray pesticide and take other precaution­s.

CABI worked with the UK’S Science and Technology Facilities Council, to develop the project. Watts told BBC that the early indication­s are that the system is working.

“Farmers are completely dependent on crops and the predictabi­lity of having a good yield to survive and also to send their kids to school,” she said.

“So if we can reduce the impact of pests, if we can enable them to get better yields – which we are already seeing – it will mean that we can help them move out of poverty.”

 ??  ?? SVEN TORFINN/PANOS PICTURES
SVEN TORFINN/PANOS PICTURES

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