Africa is battling with a fall armyworm infestation |
The fall armyworm,
which is native to the Americas, is now present in all but 10 African
countries, and threatens the food supply and income of more than 300
million people, the United Nations' Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO) said.
Maize, also known as corn, is a staple food in Africa."We don't know how
(this pest) is going to move from one part of the country to another, or
from one country to another," said the FAO's Lewis Hove, who is based
in South Africa.
The rapid pace of
the fall armyworm's spread led the FAO to launch a smartphone app on
Wednesday to map it. Hove told the Thomson Reuters Foundation the app
would help governments, researchers and donors better understand the
threat.
An updated version, scheduled for release in a few weeks, will also give farmers advice on how to protect their crops.
EXTENSIVE SPREAD
The fall armyworm was first detected in central and western Africa in 2016, the FAO said. Since then it has spread widely.
In Malawi alone it
has infested over half a million hectares of mostly maize fields, said
Hove, and another 150,000 in Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe.
"So when you're talking about the whole of Africa, it is in the region of millions of hectares," he said.
The Centre for
Agriculture and Biosciences International, a research body, has warned
the pest could cause annual losses of between 8 and 20 million tons of
maize worth billions of dollars in just a dozen African countries unless
urgently controlled.
"This represents a
range of 21-53 percent of the annual production of maize averaged over a
three year period in these countries," it said last year.
Although crop
plants are destroyed by the fall armyworm caterpillar, experts said, it
is the moths that are of key concern: the female moth can fly up to 100
kilometres (60 miles) a night, and lay 1,000 eggs in her lifetime.
Mapping that spread
is key to combating the threat, the FAO said. Farmers simply check 10
plants in a row in five different locations in their field, and mark in
the app whether the fall armyworm's larvae are absent or present.
The app, which runs on Android smartphones, then calculates the infestation level.
Once that data,
including the field's location, is uploaded to the FAO's servers, it
goes to a web-based platform where researchers and others can view it,
said Keith Cressman, who led the app-development team.
Studies show
smartphone usage in Africa is low, but Cressman, an FAO senior
agricultural officer, said the FAO's emergency support to combat fall
armyworm includes money to help countries get low-cost smartphones to
farmers.
"The smartphone is
quite a good solution as long as there are low-cost options available -
the app is simple and intuitive to use, and the transmission costs are
not high and not covered by the farmer," he said by phone.
"We want to make it very simple, very practical."
VORACIOUS APPETITE
The United States
Agency for International Development (USAID) is also involved in efforts
to combat the pest. As part of that it is looking to bring African
policymakers to Brazil, which has long dealt with the problem.
"The fall armyworm
outbreak is especially alarming because it's resistant to many other
conventional pesticides and has a voracious appetite that targets maize,
sorghum, millet and even non-staple crops like cotton," said USAID's
Jason Fraser.
He said USAID was
already training African scientists and farmers, and would look to award
a prize for innovative solutions that use digital technology to combat
fall armyworm.
Fraser, who
coordinates USAID's Fall Armyworm Task Force, said researchers were also
looking at solutions such as pesticides and seeds resistant to fall
armyworm, as well as traditional practices such as applying sugar water
to plants.
Another possible
remedy, from agribusiness giant Syngenta, would see maize seeds coated
with chemicals before planting, which could protect the plants for up to
30 days.
In the United
States, farmers use genetically modified plants and advanced pesticides.
However, experts said, those methods would likely prove too costly for
smallholder farmers in Africa, and could harm the environment and crops.
"We want to be able
to help countries understand what the available methods and
technologies are ... and have African policymakers and leaders make
decisions for themselves about what's best for their country," said
Fraser.
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