Hindustan Times (Noida)

The invasion of the food snatchers

LOCUST ALERT Crop-munching insects reach Jaipur, close in on Delhi as farmers spray pesticides through drones, tractors

- HT Correspond­ents letters@hindustant­imes.com

AN AGRICULTUR­E DEPARTMENT OFFICIAL IN UTTAR PRADESH SAID THAT THE JAIPUR SWARM WAS ONE OF THREE THAT WERE SPREADING.

JAIPUR/AGRA/NEW DELHI: Swarms of crop-munching desert locusts entered deeper into Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh over the weekend and are now close to the national capital, according to officials who said on Monday that they have put farmers on high alert and deployed insecticid­e spraying devices through drones, SUVS and tractors.

Locust invasions are common in parts of Rajasthan abutting Pakistan, but this is the first time they have reached Jaipur, a city 700 kilometres from the border, after charting a journey that experts believe began in their natural breeding ground in East Africa.

“There is a possibilit­y that the locusts will move towards Delhi in the next few days if wind speeds and directions are favourable. As of today the wind speed moved them towards north,” said the Union agricultur­e ministry’s Locust Warning Organizati­on (LWO) deputy director KL Gurjar.

Gurjar said the agency was coordinati­ng with the India Meteorolog­ical Department to determine the trajectory the insects might take.

On Monday, the swarm reached Jaipur in what was described by officials as unpreceden­ted.

An agricultur­e department official in Uttar Pradesh said that the Jaipur swarm was one of three that was spreading.

“Presently three groups are in action in this area and first one among them was moving towards Jhansi (Uttar Pradesh) based on wind direction.

The second lot seems to be heading for Morena in Madhya Pradesh. The third in Jaipur region seem to be heading towards Gangapur city in Rajasthan,” said Ram Pravesh, the district plant protection officer in Agra.

Locusts can fly up to 150 kilometres in a day and a one square-kilometre swarm can eat as much food as 35,000 people, in terms of weight, in a single day, according to the Food and Agricultur­e Organizati­on (FAO)’S Desert Locust Informatio­n Service bulletin.

Locust invasions are known to cause a considerab­le drop in agricultur­al output. A moderate infestatio­n chewed through winter crops in an estimated 300,000 hectares in Rajasthan and Gujarat in January. According to some assessment­s, the locust outbreak this time is linked to climate change and unusual rain.

While there are no crops in Rajasthan at present, the summer-sown season begins next month.

Most of the swarm seen at present consists of pink-hued sub-adult locusts. Officials fear these may arc back to their summer breeding area in the desert between India and Pakistan, where monsoon rains can help trigger a new round of breeding.

“If we are not able to control the sub-adults, they will grow into adults and return to summer breeding sites along the Indo-pak border in the desert. If there is good rainfall, moisture will make it conducive for egglaying in sandy soil. We may have to face a second generation of desert locusts then. If they are not controlled in hopper stage then they turn into swarms which will again pose a challenge for us,” said KL Gurjar, deputy director, Directorat­e of Plant Protection Quarantine and Storage.

The life of a locust varies between three and five months. These insects do not pose a direct risk to animals or humans.

The LWO official said containmen­t strategy depends upon the size of the swarm.

“When it enters from Pakistan, a swarm of one square km can have 80 million locusts. As it moves ahead, we keep killing many of them and the swarm becomes less dense but it will still have 40 million locusts,” the joint director said.

“This year, the locust attack is about eight times more aggressive than last year. Last year the locust swarm was first seen in Jaisalmer district on May 21, but this time its swarms started coming in from early May,” he added.

According to officials in Jaipur, the swarm that arrived on Monday was spread 6km wide and stretched on for 2.5km.

Locusts generally settle on vegetation around 8pm and fly off again around 9-10 am the next day, so insecticid­es are sprayed at them at night to kill them, he added.

The LWO has a ground team of 50 persons mainly to monitor and track the swarms; drones are being used for aerial spraying of Malathion 96, an organophos­phate insecticid­e and a potentiall­y toxic chemical for non-cropped areas.

For areas with agricultur­e, chlorpyrif­os is sprayed by drones, fire brigades and tractor mounted sprays.

“This year, we are able to launch control efforts only around midnight because they are settling late.

The current breed of locusts unsettles on hearing sound of tractors, making our job more difficult. An unsettled swarm is highly mobile and can travel as much as 150 kilometrem a day if winds are favourable,” said Rajasthan’s agricultur­e commission­er Om Prakash.

 ?? HIMANSHU VYAS/HT PHOTO ?? A closeup of a locust spotted around apartments near the railway station, in Jaipur, Rajasthan on Monday. Locusts frequently attack fields in areas bordering with Pakistan but swarms have also invaded Jaipur this year.
HIMANSHU VYAS/HT PHOTO A closeup of a locust spotted around apartments near the railway station, in Jaipur, Rajasthan on Monday. Locusts frequently attack fields in areas bordering with Pakistan but swarms have also invaded Jaipur this year.

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