Deccan Chronicle

The insect can fly 100 km at night, could chomp through crops year-round Fall Armyworm threatens livelihood­s

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United Nations, Aug. 15: An “invasive pest”, recently detected in India that devours more than 80 different plant species including many staple crops, could threaten the food security and livelihood­s of millions of smallscale farmers in Asia, the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on has warned.

Fall Armyworm pest was recently detected in India, marking the first time it has been found in Asia after wrecking havoc in Africa.

The Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO) fears it is “highly likely” to spread, with southeast Asia and south China most at risk.

The UN agency is offering its expertise to farmers and Government­s in the region to help them manage Fall Armyworm.

“Fall Armyworm could have a devastatin­g impact on Asia's maize and rice producers - mostly smallscale farmers who depend on their crops for food and to make a living,” said Kundhavi Kadiresan, FAO Assistant DirectorGe­neral and Regional Representa­tive for Asia and the Pacific.

She described the arrival of the pest, which has been moving steadily east across the globe, as “a threat that we cannot ignore”.

Small-scale farmers cultivate roughly 80 per cent of farmland in Asia, where more than 200 million hectares of maize and rice are cultivated each year, according to FAO.

China is the secondlarg­est maize-producing country in the world, and over 90 per cent of the world's rice is produced and consumed in the AsiaPacifi­c region.

The fear is that Fall Armyworm, which can fly 100 km at night, could chomp through crops yearround, given the region's “favourable” climate.

Though native to the Americas, Fall Armyworm has been on the march across Africa over the past two years, affecting millions of hectares of maize and sorghum.

It was first detected in Nigeria in January 2016. Two years later, it had spread to practicall­y all of sub-Saharan Africa, with the exception of 10 mostly northern countries and territorie­s.

The FAO took immediate steps to tackle the insect in Africa and to support countries in mitigating the damage it caused.

Hans Dreyer, Director of FAO's Plant Production and Protection Division, believes action taken in Africa can also benefit Asia.

“Much of what FAO has already done in subSaharan Africa to help farmers and government­s better monitor and mitigate Fall Armyworm damage, can also be applied in Asia,” he said. – PTI

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