Rajasthan: Authorities on alert after locust attack warning

ANI  |  General News 

In the wake of a attack threat from across the border, authorities here have gone on an alert to deal with a of the tropical grasshoppers entering since the can devastate standing crops.

However, the locust threat is only confined to nearby villages as the insect cannot fly long distances. However, it spreads with the help of the wind or desert storm which occurs during the summer season in the desert.

A helpline number has also been launched. According to the LWO, the last major locust outbreak was reported in in 1993 and the have been sighted after a gap of 26 years.

LWO teams are operational in the border areas of Bikaner, Jodhpur, Barmer and Phaloldi and have sprayed insecticides.

According to an official, locusts are active from the summer to the rainy season and the breeding grounds for such grasshoppers are the coastal areas of in

"Locusts have been seen in Jaisalmer. These have come from and may spread to places such as Barmer, Jaisalmer, Phalodi, Bikaner and Suratgarh," Mahesh Chandra, a senior LWO in Barmer. said.

"We have kept our machines ready and a mock drill has already been conducted. The grasshoppers' season is from June to October. A fresh stock of pesticide 'malathion' has also been brought. The situation is under control here. We have also launched a helpline number," he added.

Pakistan has reportedly sprayed pesticides from planes to deal with the locust attack and is himself taking stock of the situation.

Officials and scientists from and Pakistan had held a meeting at the border village of here on June 19 to discuss the locust outbreak and possible joint action to tackle it.

According to a locust situation update by the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation, "The longer-term outlook suggests that there is a moderate risk of a few swarms migrating after mid-June from the spring breeding areas to the summer breeding areas along both sides of the Indo-Pakistan border."

The FAO had raised an alarm over the locust outbreak in and in February, saying that heavy rains and cyclones have boosted locust breeding since last October.

It posted an update in early May stating that breeding had intensified in and Saudi Arabia, and occurred on a smaller scale in

Adult locust swarms can fly up to 150 kilometres in a day with the wind and adult can consume roughly their own weight in per day. A very small eats as much in one day as about 35,000 people, posing a devastating threat to crops and

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Mon, June 24 2019. 11:56 IST