Armyworms could reach Asia

A Malawian subsistence farmer surveys her maize fields in Dowa near the capital Lilongwe. (File photo: Mike Hutchings/Reuters)

A Malawian subsistence farmer surveys her maize fields in Dowa near the capital Lilongwe. (File photo: Mike Hutchings/Reuters)

Published Feb 6, 2017

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Johannesburg - The

fall armyworms that have ravaged corn fields from Ghana to South Africa since

arriving on the continent last year could spread to Asia and the Mediterranean,

a research body said.

Infestations of

the pest that arrived from the Americas last year have been confirmed in

Ghana, the Oxfordshire, UK-based Centre for Agriculture and Biosciences

International said. South Africa also verified Febuary 3 that the caterpillars

have arrived in the continent’s biggest producer of corn, a staple, after they travelled

from Zambia through Zimbabwe. There are reports that they’ve reach Malawi and

Namibia too.

“It can be

expected to spread to the limits of suitable African habitat within a few

years,” the organisation said in an e-mailed statement Monday. The fall

armyworm “could spread to tropical Asia and the Mediterranean in the next few

years, becoming a major threat to agricultural trade worldwide.”

Read also:  Armyworm confirmed

The caterpillars

that get their name from the large numbers that invade fields and eat the

leaves and stems are probably more dangerous than the native African armyworm,

and their introduction will pose a lasting threat to crops on the continent,

according to a paper published in October by scientists including Georg

Goergen. The pest can devastate corn fields, risking production of the staple

food in a region that’s emerging from its worst drought in more than 35 years.

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