http://arabnews.com/saudi-arabia/locusts-are-coming-0

The locusts are coming
  a..  


JEDDAH: DIANA AL-JASSEM

Thursday 7 March 2013

Swarms of desert locusts are expected to invade Saudi Arabia at the end of 
March and the beginning of April, posing a major threat to farmers and 
agriculture.


The United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization confirmed that the desert 
locusts originated in Sudan and then moved to the southern part of Egypt 
including Cairo. According to reports, it has been eight years since there has 
been such a massive invasion of locusts in Egypt.
The reports indicated that the locusts will arrive in Saudi Arabia on various 
air currents.


There are currently 10 swarms in Egypt, each estimated at between 40 to 80 
million locusts. Each female locust breeds every 12 to 15 days and lays about 
150 eggs that usually hatch after two weeks.
Adnan Al-Khan, director of the Saudi Center for Locust Control and Research, 
Ministry of Agriculture, said: “These desert locusts are still immature and are 
forming into swarms. These swarms are expected to reach the north coast of 
Saudi Arabia and start hatching there,” he said. The ministry said exploratory 
teams have been formed to monitor the movement of the swarms. He said two 
swarms arrived in the Kingdom at the end of February in Tabuk, Rabigh and 
Umluj, and reproduced into 23 million locusts. 


According to the ministry's report, locusts have been spotted in 99 locations 
in Rabigh and 72 locations in Badr. The ministry said that several exploratory 
teams have been dispatched to the western, northern, and eastern areas this 
spring. “The most threatened regions are Riyadh, Qassim, Tabuk, Madinah and 
Hail,” said Al-Khan.
The locusts are expected in Ma'an, Tafileh, Aqaba and the southern Jordan 
Valley region. They are being tackled by the Jordan Armed Forces, Desert patrol 
and the Public Security Department.
Hussain Al-Qahtani, spokesman of the Presidency of Meteorology and Environment 
(PME), said desert locust swarms breed every year. “The only problem this year 
is that the wind movement changed, which took the locusts into Egypt and now 
Saudi Arabia,” he said.


He said the PME will keep the Agriculture Ministry updated with wind 
conditions. “We contacted the municipality yesterday and told them that the 
movement of the wind has changed and will now be coming from the north and east 
borders,” he said. 
Al-Qahtani warned people about eating locusts. “This might be dangerous 
especially when these locusts are already sprayed with insecticide,” he said. 
Majida Abu Ras, deputy executive director of the Saudi Environment Society, 
said her organization and the Jeddah municipality have already started 
procedures to control the spread of the locusts. “Ground control operations are 
divided into two stages. 


The first stage has started already with the municipality and the society 
spraying all plants, so the locusts won't be able to destroy them,” she said. 
“As soon as the desert locusts arrive the municipality will spray them.”


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