Sunday Tribune

Locust swarms ravaging east Africa are the size of cities

A devastatin­g pest outbreak is threatenin­g millions of people with hunger in a region already facing precarious food security

- DAVID HERBLING and SAMUEL GEBRE

MARY Muthoni runs through her farm in Mathyakani, in south-east Kenya, shaking a bottle filled with pebbles at the clouds of locusts that swarmed into her village the night before.

That morning, the whole community rose early to try chasing off the insects, banging on pots and pans, blowing whistles and honking motorcycle horns.

“We first woke up and prayed. We prayed that the Lord shut the mouths of the locusts,” Muthoni said.

It is a scene that is playing out across east Africa as swarms of desert locusts spread through the region, destroying crops and pastures at a voracious pace. The UN has warned of an unpreceden­ted threat to food security in a part of the world where millions already face hunger. And the situation will probably get worse before it gets better. Experts say the outbreak – the worst in recent memory – is caused by an increased number of cyclones. If the weather trends continue, there may be more to come.

“There is a link between climate change and the unpreceden­ted locust crisis plaguing Ethiopia and east Africa,” UN Secretary-general Antonio Guterres said. “Warmer seas mean more cyclones generating the perfect breeding ground for locusts. Today the swarms are as big as major cities and it is getting worse by the day.”

The number of locusts in east Africa could expand 500 times by June, the UN’S Food and Agricultur­e

Organisati­on (FAO) said last month. The region gets heavy seasonal rains – and great locust-breeding and swarming conditions – from March through May. Last year, the Octoberto-december rainy season was among the wettest in 40 years, with cumulative rainfall ranging from 120% to 400% of normal.

“Locust outbreaks are expected to become more frequent and severe under climate change,” said Rick Overson, a research co-ordinator at the Global Locust Initiative at Arizona State University. “Locusts are quite adept at responding rapidly and capitalisi­ng on extreme rainfall events.”

It is a daunting prospect for a region and continent where food security is already precarious.

African farmers have struggled in recent years with destructiv­e pest attacks including the fall armyworm and tomato leafminer. Insect dynamics have also shifted with climate change, according to Baldwyn Torto, principal scientist at the Internatio­nal Centre of Insect Physiology and Ecology (ICIPE).

The desert locust may be the most dangerous yet.

“Just a single locust, if it comes into a farmer’s field in the morning, by midday it has eaten the entire field,” said FAO locust forecastin­g expert Keith Cressman. “That one field represents the entire livelihood of that farmer.”

The outbreak started in the areas around the Red Sea, a key winter breeding area for desert locusts, and spread through the Horn of Africa and into east Africa. As locusts devour crops in Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia, the insects are breeding in Djibouti, Eritrea and Sudan – all areas that are prone to drought and food shortages. Swarms have now arrived in Uganda, and locusts have also crossed into Tanzania. South Sudan is next on the watch list.

The outbreak was fostered by a long, dry spell followed by sudden high rainfall, said Torto.

“The current rainfall and vegetation index have been unusual, all the right recipes to provide the moisture conditions for locust eggs buried in the soil for decades to mass hatch into hoppers to feed and rapidly develop on the lush vegetation,” he said.

The locust invasion could lead to a considerab­le drop in agricultur­al production and exacerbate malnutriti­on and hunger. In Djibouti, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Kenya and Somalia, more than 13 million people are experienci­ng severe acute food insecurity, according to the FAO. Another 20 million are on the verge of falling into crisis if their crops are damaged or they lose their livestock.

Locusts are part of a group of insects commonly called grasshoppe­rs, but have the ability to change their behaviour and can migrate over large distances. Desert locusts can have about 40 million to 80 million locust adults in each square kilometre of a swarm and travel up to 150km a day, according to the FAO. There is an exponentia­l increase in locust numbers with every new generation of breeding, and a swarm the size of1km², containing about 40 million locusts, eats the same amount of food in one day as about 35 000 people.

The locust infestatio­n is the worst in Kenya in 70 years, according to the FAO. In Ethiopia and Somalia, it’s been 25 years since an outbreak of this severity. Desert locusts will eat most plants they find and can destroy 80% to 100% of crops in areas where they invade, said Overson.

“This damage has the most impact on food security in areas with high numbers of subsistenc­e farmers,” he said.

To control the outbreak, the

FAO is working with government­s and other groups to spray swarms with pesticides. The FAO asked for $76 million (R1.1 billion) to control the locusts’ spread, but had only received about $20m by February 10.

“We need to act quickly,” said UN Under Secretary-general for Humanitari­an Affairs and Emergency Relief Co-ordinator Mark Lowcock.

“We do have a chance to nip this problem in the bud, but that’s not what we’re doing at the moment. We’re running out of time.”

The task is more difficult because of political instabilit­y in some countries.

In Somalia, for example, the FAO says that aerial spraying has been ruled out in areas not controlled by the government. The civil war in Yemen may also have contribute­d to the outbreak.

“Politics, climate and biology coinciding has allowed the formation of bigger swarms,” said

Bill Hansson, a professor at the Max Planck Institute of Chemical Ecology in Jena, Germany.

There’s also concern that the efforts to control the outbreak may have unintended consequenc­es.

“We should be careful with spraying because it may kill other insects which are very useful in the ecosystem, such as bees for pollinatio­n,” Hansson said.

The locust threat is not limited to east Africa. Swarms in Pakistan have damaged crops including wheat and cotton and the country declared a national emergency to combat the locust attack on January 31. The insects have crossed over to India and damaged crops in the north-west states that border Pakistan. Somalia has also declared an emergency.

While there are systems in place to try to predict locust outbreaks, many government­s are not prepared to deal with them because of a lack of resources, said the ICIPE’S Torto. Africa is also particular­ly vulnerable to the effects of climate change on pest population­s, he said.

“Farmers’ traditiona­l coping methods are ineffectiv­e,” he said. “They have resorted to indiscrimi­nate spraying of pesticides to address the problem, creating more problems.”

 ?? | GIULIA PARAVICINI Reuters ?? AN ETHIOPIAN boy attempts to fend off desert locusts as they fly in a farm on the outskirts of Jijiga, Somalia.
| GIULIA PARAVICINI Reuters AN ETHIOPIAN boy attempts to fend off desert locusts as they fly in a farm on the outskirts of Jijiga, Somalia.

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