(FAO, Global Information and Early Warning System on Food and Agriculture (GIEWS), June 2, 2004)
Bulletin: Swarms Expected to Form in NW Africa and Move to Sahel
Although control operations have treated more this year than at any time since
the last plague in 1987-89, the Desert Locust situation continues to be very
worrying. Numerous swarms are expected to form in the coming weeks in NW Africa
from any hopper bands that escape the intensive aerial and ground
control operations
currently underway in
Morocco, Algeria, Tunisia
and Libya.
These swarms will invade the Sahel in West Africa during June and July and lay
eggs in areas that receive rain in southern Mauritania, Mali, Niger,
and Chad.
These will be supplemented by adult groups and swarms that form in currently
infested areas in northern Mauritania and Niger. Crops planted on the first
rains may be threatened. During June, there is also a risk of swarms appearing
in northern Senegal.
Some swarms could also reach western Sudan. Appropriate preparations should be made immediately in these countries.
Photo: FAO/GIEWS
Sorghum Damage in N.W. Mauritania, January,
2004.
International assistance is desperately required to supplement major efforts already underway and to prevent the situation from deteriorating further.
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