Daily Dispatch

‘War room’ to battle armyworm invasion

- By MIKE LOEWE

A “WAR room” to combat armyworms is being set up in the Eastern Cape.

The arrival of the crop-ravaging Brazilian fall armyworm (Spodoptera frugiperda) appears to be imminent, said Rural Developmen­t and Agrarian Reform MEC Mlibo Qoboshiyan­e yesterday.

“An attack can start at anytime,” said Qoboshiyan­e.

The worms do not merely eat the leaves like the African worm outbreak in 2013 – when they killed the plants, he said. Last month the worms swept down from Zambia and Zimbabwe across North West and Limpopo and two days ago entered the Free State.

An effective pesticide was still being identified, said deputy-directorfo­r Agricultur­e Leon Coetzee yesterday.

There are 42 500ha of government­supported maize and small garden crops at risk, said Qoboshiyan­e.

In its moth stage the insect can fly hundreds of kilometres, making it very difficult to stop its spread.

Yesterday tropical storm Dineo was also marching on SA, bringing possible deluges and 117km/h gusts, the SA Weather Service reported.

However, the Eastern Cape was “too far south” to feel it, said PE SA Weather Service spokesman Garth Sampson.

Qoboshiyan­e was speaking after a high-powered meeting of 15 crop scientists and entomologi­sts at Dohne Agricultur­al Developmen­t Institute near Stutterhei­m yesterday.

“It is moving faster than expected,” said Qoboshiyan­e, who said the worm attacked all food crops.

He said: “If it infests a field it wipes out the entire production.

“It is growing faster because of rising temperatur­es, inconsiste­nt rainfall distributi­on, drought, floods and higher concentrat­ions of carbon dioxide. There is unrest in the atmosphere”.

He said a provincial command structure would be set up this week. Chemicals are to be the main weapon, and stocks were being checked and national lists were being consulted.

A communicat­ion strategy to alert farmers to the approachin­g epidemic was being activated.

Four years ago, the African armyworm destroyed 1 233ha of maize in Amathole district municipali­ty, 722ha in Chris Hani, 95ha in Joe Gqabi and 8 124ha in Oliver Tambo district.

“This fall armyworm is severe. All districts will set up joint operation centres to prepare [for the worm’s arrival]. A joint technical commission must monitor their speed [of approach] and impact in case.”

He said there was also a concern that the African armyworm, “which is dormant”, would reappear.

Centralise­d storage facilities for pesticides and equipment were being organised and “structures for our districts” and were being activated to “capacitate farmers”.

“If this armyworm comes to our province, which is vulnerable to poverty and food deficienci­es, the impact will be much more severe [than other provinces]. We will be working with national disaster management.”

All officials in disaster management and the early warning disaster centre were on notice to deliver a “rapid response”.

“We ploughed in September and October and have been monitoring good yields. We have invested millions in supporting communal household gardens.

“We are apprehensi­ve. We will be using cellphones to monitor every day. We will be issuing contact numbers and launching a hotline this week.” —

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? WORMING ITS WAY: A picture of the damage an armyworm can cause to maize in this undated file photograph
Picture: AFP WORMING ITS WAY: A picture of the damage an armyworm can cause to maize in this undated file photograph

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