Oman Daily Observer

Southern African pest is South American invader

- CHRIS MFULA

Amaize pest that has devastated crops in southern Africa is a South American species which is harder to detect and eradicate than its African counterpar­t, agricultur­e officials and experts said on Tuesday. The fall armyworm outbreak has erupted in Zambia, Zimbabwe and Malawi and follows a crippling El Nino-triggered drought which scorched much of the region last year. The pest devours maize and other crops. The armyworms are caterpilla­rs that “march” across the landscape in large groups feasting on young plants, leaving devastatio­n in their wake.

“The tricky part with the fall armyworm is that it burrows into the plant whereas the African armyworm eats from outside,” Coillard Hamusimbi, the head of agri-business at the Zambia National Farmers’ Union, said.

“Because it burrows into the plant the fall armyworm will often only be seen when coming out after the damage has already been done. They can easily build resistance to chemical control because contact with the chemical is difficult.”

How the pest made its way to Africa is unclear. Hamusimbi said there were suspicions it came to Nigeria through the grain trade and spread from there.

Eliot Zitsanza, the Zambia-based chief scientist at the Internatio­nal Red Locust Control Organisati­on for Central and Southern Africa, which assisted in a local study on the pest, said the South American experience suggested invaded fields could lose 30 to 40 per cent of their crop.

In Zambia, an estimated 200,000 tonnes of maize have been destroyed by the fall armyworms and the military has been deployed to wage war on the bugs, which have also damaged 2,000 hectares of the staple crop in Malawi.

The outbreak in Zambia is being contained as most of the maize was attacked when it was knee-high and three-quarters of the fields that were hit were reporting the eradicatio­n of the pest, with plans to replant the crop.

Zimbabwe meanwhile was investigat­ing, and assessing the damage caused by the pest as infestatio­n levels varied and the crops could recover after spraying, chief entomologi­st in the ministry of Agricultur­e Godfrey Chikwenher­e said. — Reuters

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