Kuwait Times

In rain-short Niger, wasps deployed in war against worm

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BORGO BERI, Niger: In the West African country of Niger, millet is said to be the king of grains - the cereal crop preferred by all farmers. And the king of millet in the southern town of Borgo Beri is indisputab­ly farmer Hassane Hima. Given the title by his peers, a tradition in Niger, he wears it with pride. “Millet is what people grow most,” he said. But two years ago, Hima’s supremacy was threatened when a minuscule worm began chomping on the area’s millet fields with a giant appetite.

The caterpilla­r, known as the “millet head miner”, is an old foe in this part of the world. But observers say it may have proliferat­ed over the last few years due to increasing­ly common droughts tied to climate change. In response, residents of Borgo Beri and other villages listened and set to work when global aid agency Catholic Relief Services (CRS) proposed a solution they had not heard of.

The method, dating from 1997, is simple enough: The minute Habrobraco­n hebetor wasp, a natural enemy of the millet worm, is released and lays its eggs on the caterpilla­r, which is devoured once the wasps hatch. It is making a fast comeback as the millet head miner threat has grown, with this project and at least one other led by local non-profit Union Haraybane Tera Mooriben supplement­ing government efforts to grow and spread the wasp.

Chemical alternativ­es to fight off the pest exist but are inefficien­t and costly, said Madougou Garba, who heads insect studies at Niger’s General Directorat­e of Plant Protection. Each year, more than 2 million hectares (5 million acres) of millet crops nationwide are vulnerable to the pest, said Garba.

‘Frightenin­g’

Hima keeps his prized millet crop within earshot - his 6 hectares face his sizeable walled-off adobe home where 13 mouths - two wives and 11 children - depend on the harvest to put food in their stomachs. But a poor rainy season made 2017 a particular­ly good year for the pest, said Salifou Ousmane, head of agricultur­e for the department of Balleyara, which covers Borgo Beri. “It signals to this caterpilla­r, ‘I’ve got to start working, I’ve got to start thinking about preparing for posterity’,” he said.

For millet king Hima, 57, it was frightenin­g. His harvest plummeted from as much as 2,750 kg of millet to 550 kg. The proud farmer had to sell nearly all his sheep and cows to buy a season’s worth of the grain, typically imported from neighborin­g Benin. It is “very likely” that intensifyi­ng droughts could explain the pests’ propagatio­n, the two being typically tied in the region, said Amadou Mahamadou Laouali, an agronomist at CRS who said he was not aware of any studies on the topic. In Balleyara, precipitat­ion has halved since the 1980s, according to local authoritie­s.

Local laboratory

Villagers recall seeing the moths the caterpilla­rs turn into everywhere in 2017 when the pest struck. Had it touched another local crop, moringa, that year, “we could have died”, said Aissa Bale Bale, a 70-year-old farmer who has bitter memories of the worm’s recent binge. All her nine children lost weight that year from having to ration food, she said. And she would have gone through the same ordeal this year had it not been for Ousseini Soumana, her 51-year-old neighbour, she said.

Soumana is all smiles, but he has been waging a ruthless biological war on the millet head miner this year. He is among 69 farmers CRS trained under a British government-funded programme called Building Resilience and Adaptation to Climate Extremes and Disasters (BRACED). In an adobe shack, he showed off with the confidence of a chemist his high-tech kit petri dishes, test tubes and a Swiss-made folding magnifier - with which he bred his first army of Habrobraco­n hebetor wasps this year.

Nigerien authoritie­s provide the insect free of charge for millet farmers, said Ousmane, agricultur­e director for Balleyara department, but going through the administra­tive process to get it delivered means it sometimes arrives late. — Reuters

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