Locust Watch
Locusts in Caucasus and Central Asia
A training on locust identification and monitoring was organized by the Russian Agricultural Center on...
Two activities were organized in Kazakhstan during the first half of April 2024, in close...
With FAO support, Tajikistan and Uzbekistan continued their close collaboration and coordinated efforts on locust...
A five-day training on locust monitoring and information management was held in Bishkek on 25‑29 March,...
On 3-8 March 2024, 27 Turkmen locust experts benefited from a training delivered in Ashgabat...

Locusts and grasshoppers are serious threats for agriculture in Caucasus and Central Asia (CCA). Three locust pests, the Italian (CIT), the Moroccan (DMA) and the Migratory (LMI) locusts, jeopardize food security and livelihoods in both regions as well as in adjacent areas of northern Afghanistan and southern Russian Federation. Over 25 million hectares of cultivated areas are potentially at risk.

Locusts have a high capacity to multiply, form groups, migrate over relatively large distances (they can fly up to 100 km per day) and settle and breed in various habitats. These capacities enhance their pest status at regional level. Locust are becoming even more dangerous in the context of exceptional weather events associated with climate change, due to their very high capacity to take advantage of new situations; as an indicator, the locust situation has deteriorated with recurrent droughts since the beginning of the 21st century.

Current Locust Situation

General situation during March 2024 Forecast for April 2024
Mass hatching of the Moroccan Locust (DMA) started in the three southern Central Asia (CA) countries in March mainly, during the second decade in Tajikistan and Uzbekistan and the third decade in Afghanistan. No...

Caucasus and Central Asia - Countries

Afghanistan

Armenia

Azerbaijan

 

 

 

 

 

 

Georgia

Kazakhstan

Kyrgyzstan

 

 

 

 

 

 

The Russian Federation

Tajikistan

Turkmenistan

 

 

 

 

 

 

Uzbekistan