INSECTS
Climate Crisis Brings India's Worst Locust
Invasion in Decades
Olivia RosaneMay. 27, 2020 07:32AM ESTCLIMATE
Locusts
swarm over Jaipur, India on May 25, 2020. Vishal Bhatnagar / NurPhoto via Getty
Images
India is
facing its worst desert locust invasion in nearly 30 years, and the climate
crisis is partly to blame.
The locusts
spawned a swarm of social media posts Monday when they entered the city of
Jaipur, as The Indian Express reported, but the crop-devouring insects have
been wreaking havoc since May in an invasion that both began earlier and is
extending farther than usual. Several farmers told The Wire that they hadn't
seen an invasion this severe in their lifetimes.
"Even
my father, who is 86, said he hasn't ever seen anything like this. Only heard
about this in folk tales," 64-year-old Madhya Pradesh farmer Sooraj Pandey
told The Wire.
Locusts are
not uncommon in the northwest Indian state of Rajasthan, but this year they
have also entered the states of Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh for the first
time since 1993 and the state of Maharashtra for the first time since 1974.
They also do not usually move so far into Rajasthan from the border with
Pakistan, according to AFP reporting published by Al Jazeera.
So far, the
insects have devoured almost 50,000 hectares or 123,500 acres of agricultural
land in seven Indian states, The Associated Press reported, putting pressure on
farmers already struggling with the impacts of the coronavirus lockdown.
The
government has responded with pesticides, drones and sprayers mounted on
vehicles, while farmers have resorted to banging plates, whistling and throwing
stones to drive the locusts away.
"These
insects are giving us sleepless nights. We are more worried about them than the
virus," Mandeep Singh, a cotton farmer from Punjab, told The Associated
Press.
A swarm of
40 million locusts can cover the space of a square kilometer (approximately 0.4
square miles) and eat the same as 35,000 people in a day, according to UN Food
and Agricultural Organization data reported by The Wire.
Unusually
large locust swarms bred on the Arabian Peninsula in early 2019 following heavy
rains and cyclones in the region, according to AFP. Those ideal breeding
conditions were the product of the climate crisis, as warmer than usual
temperatures in the western Indian Ocean fueled the storms.
"These
warm waters were caused by the phenomenon called the Indian Ocean Dipole — with
warmer than usual waters to its west, and cooler waters to its east. Rising
temperatures due to global warming amplified the dipole and made the western
Indian Ocean particularly warm," Indian Institute of Tropical Meteorology
climate scientist Roxy Mathew Koll told The Wire.
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