Locusts now threatening parts of southern Africa, UN says

Locusts are threatening another part of Africa, with up to 7 million people in the southern region facing further food insecurity, the United Nations said Friday.
The outbreaks of African migratory locusts in Botswana,
Namibia, Zambia and Zimbabwe are not related to the huge outbreak of billions
of desert locusts that has affected East Africa for months, the U.N. Food and
Agriculture Organization said.
While far smaller, the southern outbreaks need quick
attention to prevent a wider problem as farmers and others already struggle to
recover from a serious drought last year and the economic effects of the
COVID-19 pandemic, the U.N. agency said in a statement.
Swarms of the voracious insects “can eat enough food for
2,500 people in a day,” according to a separate Food and Agriculture
Organization document on the southern Africa outbreaks. A single swarm can
contain millions of locusts.
While all four countries have launched pesticide spraying
efforts that have been called the only effective locust control, the work has
been limited, the FAO said.
“The situation is aggravated by the inaccessibility and
ecological sensitivity of some of the affected areas,” the agency said. A new
emergency response initiative seeks environmental friendly pesticides along
with other support.
One locust breeding area has been Botswana’s well-known and
wildlife-rich Okavango delta.
The Botswana outbreak began in May, and the countries and
the U.N. decided by late June that the outbreaks were a regional emergency.
“Some of the worst-affected areas are very difficult to
reach,” FAO southern Africa coordinator Patrice Talla said.
BS