For over a year now, East Africa has been going through a massive Desert Locust infestation that has stripped farming families of food and income and threatened the food security of millions throughout the region.
In such large-scale emergency situations, killing locusts with pesticides is a necessary evil to limit the crisis and prevent swarms from multiplying exponentially. Traditionally, chemical pesticides have been the only effective method to control extreme locust infestations. And because they work the quickest, they remain a key tool in extreme cases like the large-scale infestations that have hit the greater Horn of Africa region.
But increasingly, nature-based biological pesticides (biopesticides) offer a reliable, less harmful alternative for controlling locust outbreaks before they reach crisis levels, in situations when the timing allows for their use. They also offer a solution for treating outbreaks in fragile ecosystems.
“When and where possible, we’ve been using biopesticides to control Desert Locusts, and it’s a great tool to treat initial, small groups of hoppers before they form huge hopper bands,” says Keith Cressman, a locust expert at FAO. For example, in the current crisis, some 236 000 hectares in Somalia were treated with biopesticides and insect growth regulators,” he notes.
“We’re looking at an insect that multiplies 20-fold with each new generation every three months, so moving forward it’s critical that we shift our focus to interventions than can disrupt the breeding cycle. And using an effective ecological tool that farmers and governments can use in any environment makes sense in this time and age,” according to Cressman.