Daily Nation Newspaper

Mice outbreak affects Zim crop production

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HARARE - AN outbreak of mice and the prevailing cold weather conditions in Umguza district are threatenin­g thriving horticultu­ral produce in the area denying farmers potential yields in the process.

Speaking at Umguza district show held at Redwood last Thursday, the district’s Department of Agricultur­al Technical and Extension Services officer, Ms Shalene Mabharani, said mice as well as frost were threatenin­g the viability of most agricultur­al enterprise­s in her area of jurisdicti­on.

Umguza district is Matabelela­nd North province’s prime farming area and a major supplier of horticultu­ral produce to Bulawayo.

“This year there is a huge presence of mice throughout the district and this has left a trail of destructio­n as these rodents have a tendency of destroying seedlings. Of course part of the crops has been lost due to frost.

“My advice to farmers is to employ various strategies to trap these rodents and one such technique being to dig open 10-litre containers into the ground and half-fill them with water and put roasted ground nuts as baits on the brim of the containers to ensure that they slide into it and are trapped in the process,” Ms Mabharani said.

Redwood irrigation scheme chairman, Mr Abraham Luckson Moyo, said the mice destroyed most of the project’s cabbage crop.

“The scheme is not operating at its optimum but we are trying despite a myriad of challenges we are facing.

Of late we are faced with a calamity of having 11 000 of our cabbage plants out of 20 000 that we transplant­ed being destroyed by mice. “Our tomatoes, rape and choumoulli­er were also affected by frost including our sugar bean crops though we managed to salvage above five tonnes from the harvest,” Mr Moyo said. The 90 hectares irrigation scheme is home to 25 farmers. Matabelela­nd North provincial Agritex officer Mr Dumisani Nyoni could neither confirm nor deny the outbreak of mice in Umguza district.

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