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Australia largest Locust infestation in 75 yrs

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    Australia largest Locust infestation in 75 yrs

    Australia faces worst plague of locusts in 75 years
    Ideal breeding conditions for grasshoppers are
    expected to cost farmers billions

    Australia's Darling river is running with water again
    after a drought in the middle of the decade reduced
    it to a trickle. But the rains feeding the continent's
    fourth-longest river are not the undiluted good
    news you might expect. For the cloudbursts also
    create ideal conditions for an unwelcome pest – the
    Australian plague locust.

    The warm, wet weather that prevailed last summer
    meant that three generations of locusts were born,
    each one up to 150 times larger than the previous
    generation. After over-wintering beneath the
    ground, the first generation of 2010 is already
    hatching. And following the wettest August in seven
    years, the climate is again perfect. The juveniles will
    spend 20 to 25 days eating and growing, shedding
    their exoskeletons five times before emerging as
    adults, when population pressure will force them to
    swarm.

    It is impossible to say how many billions of bugs
    will take wing, but many experts fear this year's
    infestation could be the worst since records began
    – 75 years ago. All that one locust expert, Greg
    Sword, an associate professor at the University of
    Sydney, would say was: "South Queensland, New
    South Wales and Victoria are all going to get
    hammered."

    A one-kilometre wide swarm of locusts can chomp
    through 10 tons of crops – a third of their combined
    body weight – in a day. The New South Wales
    Farmers Association said an area the size of Spain
    was affected and the Government of Victoria alone
    forecasts A$2bn (£1.2bn) of damage.

    Though locusts move slowly when the sun's up, at
    night they can fly high and fast, sometimes
    travelling hundreds of kilometres. "A farmer can go
    to bed at night not having seen a grasshopper all
    year and wake up in the morning to find his fields
    full of them," said Professor Sword.

    All locusts are grasshoppers, but not all
    grasshoppers are locusts. The difference is a suite
    of genetic changes that kick in when population
    densities cross a critical threshold. In some species,
    they produce physical transformations – the desert
    locust of North Africa goes from green to black and
    yellow, for example – but the Australian plague
    locust merely reprogrammes its behaviour, from
    solitary to gregarious.

    Swarms probably make use of the available food
    more efficiently as the leading edge is constantly
    pushing forwards into new vegetation. It may be
    fear more than hunger, however, that drives the
    locusts.

    Locusts are highly cannibalistic, says Professor
    Sword, and any that stay still too long are likely to
    get nibbled. "Swarms are like lifeboats," he says,
    forging a gruesome metaphor. "If you're the only
    one in the boat, you could easily starve. But if
    you've got lots of company, you could be the last to
    survive. We call it travelling with your lunch."

    Controlling the bugs involves spotter planes
    identifying juvenile bands that can be targets for
    attack by crop sprayers armed with pesticides. But
    eastern Australia is struggling to find enough pilots
    to take on all the work.

    And the spraying itself comes at a cost. Apiarists
    have complained that their bees are in danger from
    pesticides and ecologists fear for the many animals
    that treat the locusts as a moving smorgasbord.
    Concerns have also been raised by bloggers and
    activists that some of the chemicals used could
    harm humans.

    The best hope for phasing out the chemicals comes
    from research. But the goal, says Professor Sword,
    is control not eradication. "They were here long
    before humans arrived," he said.

    #2
    hatchings have just commenced within 30km of me.
    They hatch and then band or congregate together as nymphs for about 3 weeks then they fly.
    The target is to spray them when they are in these bands, its apparently easy to do and find in farming areas but the vaste expanse of our outback is where the problem lies.Band may get missed in these locations and locusts can fly 500 km in a night apparently land and feed on grren vegitation ie crop.
    They have some sort of radar or some sort of sixth sense which tells them were green feed is whilst flying.
    Will keep you updated. cheers a link below

    http://sj.farmonline.com.au/news/state/grains-and-cropping/general/locust-hatchings-begin-in-earnest/1950216.aspx

    Comment


      #3
      Are you expected major crop damage?

      Comment


        #4
        No only because i think authorities and farmers have got a good handle on everthing and are vigilant.

        But were expecting 24 and 28 degrees celcius on sun and monday this week coming and is perfect for locust egg hatching so watch this space

        Comment

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