Some locusts may appear old and others pregnant but the invasion in Kenya is bound to get worse, a UN agency has warned.
The
Food and Agriculture Organisation says a rising number of hopper bands
and first-generation immature swarms continue to form in the country.
The
FAO, in its latest alert, says widespread swarm breeding continues in
northern and central Kenya, with further concentration expected in
Marsabit and Turkana counties.
ALARMING
In a memo dated March 10, it noted that this may be supplemented by new-generation immature swarms arriving from Somalia.
“The
situation remains extremely alarming in the Horn of Africa,
specifically Kenya, Ethiopia and Somalia, where widespread breeding is
in progress and new swarms are starting to form, representing an
unprecedented threat to food security and livelihoods at the beginning
of the upcoming cropping season," it said.
“Breeding continues in Ethiopia
with a widespread swarm of instar hopper bands in Oromiya and SNNPR
regions, including the Rift Valley.”
Immature
swarms, the agency added, are also present in the south, where
cross-border movements are likely from adjacent areas of Somalia and
Kenya.
“Late instar
hopper bands, maturing adult groups, fledglings and immature adult
groups have been spotted in Somalia, Sudan and Eritrea,” the FAO said.
AFFECTED COUNTIES
The
desert locusts were first spotted in Wajir and Mandera counties and
have made their way to Samburu, Isiolo, Garissa, Baringo, Turkana,
Laikipia, Meru, Kitui, Embu, Machakos, Murang’a, Makueni and Kajiado.
Nairobi
has tried to combat the worst locust invasion in 70 years through
aerial spraying of pesticides but the number of those entering the
country each day and breeding is overwhelming.
According
to statistics from Samburu County's Special Programmes Department, the
new generation bred in Kenya is already flying to Lekiji, Melepo Moo,
Sesia and Mabati in Samburu East, decimating crops.
The voracious insects have a strong preference for graminaceous plants such as millet and maize.
Experts estimate that the insects are capable of destroying at least 200 tonnes of vegetation per day.
Swarms
can travel up to 130km (80 miles) per day and a kilometre-wide swarm
can contain up to 80 million locusts, according to the FAO.
DRONE TECHNOLOGY
Scientists
from the Entomological Society of Kenya recommended advanced drone
technology to contain the locusts devastating farms and grazing fields
in different parts of the country.
They noted that aircraft deployed by the Ministry of Agriculture to conduct aerial spraying are insufficient for huge swarms.
According
to Dr Muo Kasina, the society's chairman, the aircraft cannot areas
such as deep valleys and mountain contours, where some of the locusts
may be.
The FAO states that this is the worst invasion of desert locusts in the Horn of Africa in 25 years.
It
poses an unprecedented threat to food security in the entire
sub-region, with more than 19 million people in East Africa already
experiencing a high degree of food insecurity.
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