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Vast numbers of locusts have been swarming across East Africa in recent months, devastating crops and threatening food security in the region. Now, authorities are hoping a new app could help them gain the upper hand in their battle against the pests.
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Called E-Locusts, the app allows a team of locust scouts to track the swarms and provide real-time information on their size and location.
“I go look for locusts where they are, I report, I take pictures, I upload videos of their movement and also advise them which kind of control can be used,” Achilo Christopher, a locust scout in the Turkana region of northern Kenya, told Reuters.
The information is logged in a central database and analysed by technical teams who can then decide what action to take including whether to spray pesticides either by plane or with ground teams.
The app was launched by the UNs Food and Agriculture Organisation in response to growing fears the locust infestations are threatening food security in the region.
The current locust infestation is the worst that's been seen for three generations, with unseasonably wet weather helping them to breed in greater numbers than usual.>Read More – Source
Issued on:
Vast numbers of locusts have been swarming across East Africa in recent months, devastating crops and threatening food security in the region. Now, authorities are hoping a new app could help them gain the upper hand in their battle against the pests.
Advertising
Read more
Called E-Locusts, the app allows a team of locust scouts to track the swarms and provide real-time information on their size and location.
“I go look for locusts where they are, I report, I take pictures, I upload videos of their movement and also advise them which kind of control can be used,” Achilo Christopher, a locust scout in the Turkana region of northern Kenya, told Reuters.
The information is logged in a central database and analysed by technical teams who can then decide what action to take including whether to spray pesticides either by plane or with ground teams.
The app was launched by the UNs Food and Agriculture Organisation in response to growing fears the locust infestations are threatening food security in the region.
The current locust infestation is the worst that's been seen for three generations, with unseasonably wet weather helping them to breed in greater numbers than usual.>Read More – Source