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There's A Plague Of Locusts In Argentina. Could We See The Bugs Here?

Courtesy Sebastián Lorenzo Pisarello
/
Senasa
A worker tries to fumigate locusts in northern Argentina. Once they are adults who can fly, the locusts are much harder to control.

The normally dry northern region of Argentina has a problem of biblical proportions.

Farmers there are struggling with a massive outbreak of locusts. Dark clouds of the green-brown bugs cast shadows when they fly overhead and when they land, they cover the ground.

“It is really, really, amazing when you see the locusts because you see millions of them together,” said Juan Pablo Karnatz, who raises cattle in Santiago del Estero, about 600 miles northwest of Argentina’s capital, Buenos Aires. “When you think they can be more millions flying around, it could be a disaster.”

While it’s not unheard of for northern Argentina to have locust swarms, it has been at least 50 years since an outbreak of this magnitude. The swarms can stretch to eight square miles, Karnatz says, and they eat everything in their path.

So far they’ve mostly been eating not from crop fields, Karnatz says, but from pasture lands, though several thousand acres of mostly onions are destroyed.

Credit Courtesy Juan Pablo Karnatz
Parts of Argentina have been swarmed by a South American locust, Schistocerca cancellata, pictured here in Santiago Del Estero province. It is not found in North America.

  As a major agricultural player, Argentina is a place whose rural problems raise eyebrows in U.S. farm country. Farmers here, though, don’t have much to worry about when it comes to massive swarms of locusts.

Routine monitoring and control could have prevented the problem in Argentina, critics of the government say. Many say officials in the government of former President Cristina Fernández de Kirchner failed to develop an adequate plan to combat the bugs, and failed to spend the money needed to head off the plague.

“I guess that the problem was that the government didn't do their job correctly in the past two years,” said Fernando Miguez, an agronomy professor at the Catholic University of Argentina in Buenos Aires.

Locusts are merely particular types of grasshoppers that, when their numbers swell thanks to favorable weather and plentiful food, transition from solitary critters to gregarious masses – ravenous swarms that create dark clouds and devour anything green.

The government can spray insecticides when conditions are favorable for an outbreak, Miguez said, in order to control for the massive amount of bugs and prevent the swarms.

Farmers began seeing the 2-inch long grasshoppers in June 2015. Now, the Argentine agriculture department is on the job . Miguez says its efforts could keep the locust from reaching major cash crops including corn and soybeans.

“They are spraying them and hoping that all the pockets they find and they spray, it's enough to prevent a swarm to develop,” Miguez said.

It will be weeks, if not longer, before anyone knows for sure how localized the outbreak remains. And it could be a year or two before the infested area fully recovers.

Locusts are plague number eight, as detailed in the Bible. But as a new generation of Argentine farmers can attest, locust are not just a Biblical threat. Here in the U.S., however, farmers need not worry.

“The good news is of the several species of migratory grasshoppers that form these locust plagues, none are currently in North America,” said Donald Lewis, an entomologist at Iowa State University.

While the U.S. is still home to lots of grasshoppers, many likely fall victim to the pesticides used to control other bugs in crop fields. Eradicating grasshoppers, however, is not the goal. On rangelands, in fact, they remain a crucial part of the ecosystem .

“They actually stimulate plant growth,” said Alexandre Latchininsky, an entomologist at the University of Wyoming.

Grasshoppers fertilize dry pasture land, Latchininsky said, and they provide food for sage grouse and other Western wildlife.  

Locust plagues did terrorize pioneer settlers on the Great Plains – think Little House on the Prairie or the Mormon Trail. But loss of habitat mostly dealt with that, Latchininsky said.

“We used to have one locust species, which was the Rocky Mountain locust, infamous in the second-half of the 19th Century,” Latchininsky said. “But it went extinct in the beginning of the 20th Century.”

So here at least, we should be safe from locusts. As for the other nine plagues...you’re on your own.

Amy Mayer is a reporter based in Ames. She covers agriculture and is part of the Harvest Public Media collaboration. Amy worked as an independent producer for many years and also previously had stints as weekend news host and reporter at WFCR in Amherst, Massachusetts and as a reporter and host/producer of a weekly call-in health show at KUAC in Fairbanks, Alaska. Amy’s work has earned awards from SPJ, the Alaska Press Club and the Massachusetts/Rhode Island AP. Her stories have aired on NPR news programs such as Morning Edition, All Things Considered and Weekend Edition and on Only A Game, Marketplace and Living on Earth. She produced the 2011 documentary Peace Corps Voices, which aired in over 160 communities across the country and has written for The New York Times, Boston Globe, Real Simple and other print outlets. Amy served on the board of directors of the Association of Independents in Radio from 2008-2015.
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