12 February 2017
Bolivia has started chemical
spraying in its eastern grain region to fight a plague of locusts which is
endangering thousands of hectares of crops.
The locusts were first reported
in January and have already taken over 1,000 hectares in the province of Santa
Cruz.
Bolivian President Evo Morales
said it was the first time his country had seen locusts.
Neighbouring Argentina has
suffered with them since the 1920s.
The government has set up a new
unit to deal with the challenge and has asked the Argentine government to provide
expertise and advice.
The government and local farmers
in Santa Cruz say they plan to fumigate up to 17,000 hectares to prevent the
locusts from spreading and endangering the food supply.
Image copyright Reuters Image
caption The government said it would help farmers start distributing fumigation
equipment
Local producers said they were
desperately trying to identify where the eggs and locust nymphs were so that
they could control the initial stages of the plague more effectively.
Bolivia is normally
self-sufficient in grain production, and for the moment the area affected by
locusts represents only a small fraction of the 100,000 hectares planted with
grains in Santa Cruz.
The locusts follows a severe
drought in Bolivia which led to water rationing and conflicts over water use.
Producers in Santa Cruz, one of
Bolivia's wealthiest areas, have for years lobbied the government to allow the
use of genetically-modified seeds which they say will help produce crops that
are resistant to plagues and adverse climate conditions.
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