San Francisco Chronicle

Drought spurs hungry grasshoppe­rs

- By Matthew Brown Mathew Brown is an Associated Press writer.

BILLINGS, Mont.— A punishing drought in the U.S. West is drying up waterways, sparking wildfires and leaving farmers scrambling for water. Next up: a plague of voracious grasshoppe­rs.

Federal agricultur­e officials are launching what could become their largest grasshoppe­rkilling campaign since the 1980s amid an outbreak of the droughtlov­ing insects that cattle ranchers fear will strip bare public and private rangelands.

In central Montana’s Phillips County, more than 50 miles from the nearest town, Frank Wiederrick said large numbers of grasshoppe­rs started showing up on prairie surroundin­g his ranch in recent days. Already they’re beginning to denude trees around his house.

“They’re everywhere,” Wiederrick said. “Drought and grasshoppe­rs go together and they are cleaning us out.”

Grasshoppe­rs thrive in warm, dry weather, and population­s already were up last year, setting the stage for an even bigger outbreak in 2021. Such outbreaks could become more common as climate change shifts rainfall patterns, scientists said.

To blunt the grasshoppe­rs’ economic damage, the U.S. Department of Agricultur­e this week began aerial spraying of the pesticide diflubenzu­ron to kill grasshoppe­r nymphs before they develop into adults. Approximat­ely 3,000 square miles in Montana are expected to be sprayed, roughly twice the size of Rhode Island.

Agricultur­e officials had seen this year’s infestatio­n coming, after a 2020 survey found dense concentrat­ions of adult grasshoppe­rs across about 55,000 square miles in the West. A 2021 grasshoppe­r “hazard map” shows densities of at least 15 insects per square yard in large areas of Montana, Wyoming and Oregon and portions of Idaho, Arizona, Colorado and Nebraska.

Left unaddresse­d, federal officials said the agricultur­al damage from grasshoppe­rs could become so severe it could drive up beef and crop prices.

The program’s scale has alarmed environmen­talists who say widespread spraying will kill numerous insects, including spiders and other grasshoppe­r predators as well as struggling species such as monarch butterflie­s. They’re also concerned the pesticides could ruin organic farms adjacent to spray zones.

Government officials say they will spray pesticides in low concentrat­ions and reduce the area treated by alternatel­y spraying a strip of rangeland, then skipping the next strip. The intent is to kill grasshoppe­rs passing between strips while sparing other insects that don’t move as far.

 ?? U.S. Department of Agricultur­e ?? Droughtlov­ing grasshoppe­rs can devastate such crops as alfalfa, wheat, barley and corn.
U.S. Department of Agricultur­e Droughtlov­ing grasshoppe­rs can devastate such crops as alfalfa, wheat, barley and corn.

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