| Fungal
Pesticide Saves Crops from Locusts
Crops in East
and Southern Africa have been saved from devastation by the
first large-scale use of a biopesticide made of fungal spores.
Locust swarms lay waste to crops, with
just a small part of a swarm around a tonne of locusts
eating the same amount of food in one day as around
2,500 people, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization
(FAO).
The FAO feared that infestations of red
locusts would turn into a full-scale invasion, endangering
the food security of millions. But spraying the biopesticide,
Green Muscle, in Tanzania appears to have contained the outbreak.
Green Muscle consists of spores of the
fungus Metarhizium anisopliae suspended in mineral oils. The
fungi grow in the locust, producing a toxin and weakening
them, making them easy prey for birds and lizards.
Most infected locusts die within 13
weeks, depending on the temperature and humidity. The pesticide
has an 80 per cent mortality rate.
The spraying campaign, organised by the
FAO and the International Locust Control Organization for
Central and Southern Africa, started on 21 May in Tanzania.
Around 10,000 hectares have been sprayed so far.
The FAO will spend US$2 million deploying
the pesticide in Tanzania, Malawi and Mozambique over the
next few months.
A senior FAO locust expert, Christian
Pantenius, told SciDev.Net that African countries should embrace
the technology, which costs just US$17 per hectare.
Green Muscle kills only locusts and grasshoppers,
unlike chemical pesticides, which can harm a wide range of
organisms. Even the birds and lizards that eat the treated
locusts suffer no side effects, says Pantenius.
Since its commercial release in 2000,
Green Muscle has been tried in Madagascar, Niger, Senegal
and Sudan, but this is its first large-scale application.
However, the time lag from spraying to
the locusts dying and the fact that the fungus survives
for weeks means that Green Muscle is more appropriate
for prevention than controlling outbreaks, says Pantenius.
Baldwyn Torto of the International Centre
of Insect Physiology and Ecology in Kenya, told SciDev.Net
that Senegal and South Africa are ready to produce Green Muscle.
Source: SciDev.Net
Date: 27 July 2009

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