Insect infestation

An insect pest infestation is a recently detected insect pest population, including an incursion, or a sudden significant increase of an established insect, disease agents or weed population in an area leading to damage to plants in production fields, forests or natural habitats and causing substantial damage to productivity, biodiversity or natural resources (adapted from FAO, 2019).

Risk factors

Higher temperature, severe and extreme weather events and drought stress can all result in reduced vigour of trees, making them more vulnerable to outbreaks of native and introduced pests and diseases. For example, the dieback of millions of hectares of pine forests caused by outbreaks of native bark beetles in Central America, Europe and North America is associated with climate change, impacts of extreme weather events, and, in some cases, inadequate forest management practices (FAO, 2020b).

Favourable climatic conditions, disruption of ecosystems and negligence of crop/forest hygiene contribute to growth in insect populations which can cause substantial damage regularly. In many cases, long distance spread of insects results from transportation of infested goods.

Risk reduction measures

Following principles of sustainable plant production, sustainable forest management and integrated pest management practices are the best approach for control, focusing on diversified production systems, regular surveillance, preparedness before potential outbreaks, and a rapid response to prevent escalation to unmanageable scales (Guzewich et al., 1997). Post disaster needs assessment (PDNA) is designed to evaluate immediate needs for recovery and restoration for better disaster response (HIP).

Latest Insect infestation additions in the Knowledge Base

Update

'Tackling climate change is a game of we-are-all-in-it-together. A global-level cooperation will provide the right platform for shared innovation and know-how to accelerate the technology R&D to address the common challenge we all face today,' said Changhua Wu of the Climate Group...

Climate Change Organisation, the
Update

Indigenous knowledge is threatened by globalization and the continued marginalization and impoverishment of indigenous peoples, asserts Emily Kirkland on AlertNet's Climate Conversations blog. She urges NGOs and governments to promote, protect, and disseminate traditional knowledge...

Thomson Reuters Foundation, trust.org
Update

CDFA Secretary Karen Ross is announcing the establishment of a consortium of growers, educators, and technical experts in California to study and make recommendations on strategies for climate change adaptation...

California Department of Food and Agriculture Office of Public Affairs
Policies and plans

The National Locust Risk Management Plan (PGRA) is based on two components: the Locust Risk Prevention Plan (PPRA) and the National Locust Emergency Plan (PNUA).

Niger - government
Photo by USDAgov   CC BY 2.0 http://www.flickr.com/photos/usdagov/7408428590
Update

'What we’re seeing is a window into what global warming really looks like. It looks like heat. It looks like fires. It looks like this type of environmental disaster,' said Michael Oppenheimer, a geoscientist at Princeton University in an interview with The New York Times...

Thomson Reuters Foundation, trust.org
Update

Climate change has worsened dry spells, however 'public policies regarding both population growth and forest management are adding to the wildfire problem'. Additionally, heavy damage from pine beetles have created 'stacks of dry timber from forest thinning efforts waiting to be burned'...

Community Radio for Northern Colorado
Update

'If there is an invasion of locusts, like in 2004, it will be a catastrophe,' said Manda Sadio Keita, a programme officer of the UN Food and Agriculture Organization. 'Crops and pasture will be destroyed and nomadic cattle keepers would lose their herds.'

The New Humanitarian
Photo by likeablerodent CC BY-SA 2.0 http://www.flickr.com/photos/antichrist/34263361
Update

Croplands in Niger and Mali are at imminent risk from Desert Locust swarms that are moving southward from Algeria and Libya, FAO warned today. 'How many locusts there are and how far they move will depend on two major factors – the effectiveness of current control efforts in Algeria and Libya and upcoming rainfall in the Sahel of West Africa,' said Keith Cressman, FAO Senior Locust Forecasting Officer...

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations - Headquarters
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