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Desert Locust: mature adult. Credit: A. Monard, CIRAD |
by Pensoft Publishers
Since the 1960s, a preventive control strategy against this pest has been implemented, based on monitoring of outbreak areas and ecological conditions, followed, if necessary, by early intervention and limited use of pesticides, so that any outbreak can be stopped as soon as possible. With 60 years of hindsight, desert locust invasions are now less frequent, smaller in scale and, if they cannot be stopped early, they are adequately managed.
However, financial and political uncertainties in many parts of the desert locust's range continue to sustain the threat, and not all invasions can be stopped early. This was the case in 2018 when such an upsurge was largely aided by rains in the southern Arabian Peninsula. Locusts could not be detected for several months and therefore went unchecked, mainly due to the insecure conditions, especially in Yemen. The swarms then progressively contaminated a large part of East Africa and spread to Iran, Pakistan and India. Pakistan, in particular, subject to periodic swarm invasions in the past, faced a particularly severe situation in 2019-2020, where the swarms could only be contained after several months of intensive control.
Scientists Riffat Sultana, Ahmed Ali Samejo and Samiallah Soomro (University of Sindh, Pakistan), Santosh Kumar (University of Cholistan, Pakistan), and Michel Lecoq (former director of a locust research unit at CIRAD, France) synthesized these two years of an upsurge in a new research article published in the open-access Journal of Orthoptera Research.
The authors also note that Pakistan needs to continue to be prepared and improve the prevention system already in place. They suggest developing compensatory measures for local populations in the event of an uncontrolled invasion at an early stage, increasing the use of alternatives to chemical pesticides such as mycopesticides, and maintaining funding mechanisms that provide sustainable support even in times of recession. Perhaps the most important challenge is certainly to maintain long-term efforts to build resilience, despite the apparent absence of imminent threats.
Source: Riffat Sultana et al, The 2019–2020 upsurge of the desert locust and its impact in Pakistan, Journal of Orthoptera Research (2021). DOI: 10.3897/jor.30.65971
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