Crop invaders: China's small farmers struggle to defeat armyworm
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[August 09, 2019]
By Hallie Gu and Ryan Woo
MENGHAI, China (Reuters) - Yan Wenliu leans
on the side of his cart as he prepares to leave his sugarcane field in
Southwest China, bewildered by the formidable new pest that has ambushed
his crops this year.
"I don't know what it is," says Yan, a 36-year-old farmer from Menghai
county in Yunnan province. "But it is bigger than other ones. I have
never seen this worm before."
The creature Yan is unable to name is fall armyworm. Known locally as
the "heart-devouring worm," the destructive pest has spread more than
3,000 km (1,865 miles) north since migrating from neighboring Myanmar
seven months ago, reaching 21 provinces and regions in China and posing
a grave threat to grain output.
In Yunnan alone, where the pest struck first in China, some 1.29 million
mu (86,000 hectares) had been affected by mid-June, including corn,
sugarcane, sorghum and ginger crops.
First found in the Americas, fall armyworm has spread through Africa and
Asia since 2016, flying up to 100 km (60 miles) a night. It can't be
eradicated and its management is both costly and difficult.
This poses a formidable challenge in China where about 90% of crop
production comes from small farms of less than a hectare (2.5 acres) and
owners lack basic knowledge and resources to tackle the pest.
Beijing warned earlier this year that armyworm was a severe threat to
the country's food security and in May launched a campaign to "snatch
grain from the insect's mouth."
Millions of yuan have been allocated to affected regions and experts
sent to educate farmers.
(Graphics: Fall Armyworm invasion of Asia IMG click, https://tmsnrt.rs/2XYNbIX)
PESTICIDE OR PENNILESSTo those in Yunnan, the solution to the worm
problem seemed obvious - pesticide. "You have to keep spraying
chemicals. If you don't kill the worm, you will end up penniless," says
sugarcane farmer Yan in Mengkang village.
But paying for the pesticide in the quantities required has left many
farmers out of pocket, while a failure to follow the complex regime
needed - using different pesticides at different crop growth stages and
rotating them to prevent resistance - means the money is often wasted.
"You just can't kill them," says Yan Hannen, a 44-year-old farmer, from
nearby Nuodong. "I have been farming for 20 years but have never seen
this many worms."
A frustrated Yan applied pesticides fives times to his last crop of
sweet corn, but output nearly halved. He has already sprayed his new
crop twice, to little effect.
"They told me to use one bucket but I used three. It still did not work.
What can you do?" he asked.
Local government has held many meetings to brief farmers on the pest and
villagers have improved their approach to using pesticides, said Yan
Xiangwa, a village official in Nuodong.
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An armyworm, which usually comes out at night, is seen on sugar cane
crop around dusk at a village of Menghai county in Xishuangbanna Dai
Autonomous Prefecture, Yunnan Province, China, July 12, 2019.
REUTERS/Aly Song
But for farmers who have already battled severe drought this year,
the latest threat has put their entire livelihoods at risk.
Villagers tend to give up treatment due to the high cost, the Yunnan
provincial government said in a report last month, adding that
sufficient human resources for plant protection were also lacking at
the local level.
Yu Xianger, another Nuodong farmer, sprayed pesticide on her 2 mu
(0.13 hectare) of corn field without results and is thinking about
finding work in the city.
"The worms have devastated my corn crops this year. And there's
nothing much else I can do," she said.
(Graphics: Areas suitable for Fall Armyworm click, https://tmsnrt.rs/2XYgvPY)
COMPLEX FIGHT
Experts say the fight against armyworms is difficult and the enemy
is a tough one. Adept at hiding, the pest is hard to detect and
prefers to venture out at night, to feast on plants and fly to new
pastures.
"Local farmers here didn't use much pesticide before and wouldn't
buy chemicals until they saw the worms, meaning they might have
missed the best time to kill them," said Yao, a sales manager for
pesticide supplier Jingbo Agrochemicals Technology Co. Ltd. in
Xishuangbanna, Yunnan province.
The villagers' slow response to the arrival of armyworm was not
helped by the absence of a trapping system involving lights and
pheromones that Beijing says is currently being deployed nationwide.
Despite the problems in the country's south, the outlook for China's
main corn production area in the north is "much better," says Hu Gao,
professor of insect ecology at Nanjing Agricultural University.
Control and prevention measures have given the region, which
accounts for more than 70% of China's corn production, more time to
prepare for an invasion.
The worm has yet to reach the northeastern provinces including
Heilongjiang, the top grower of the grain, and some experts believe
the lower temperatures in the region will protect it from a full
attack.
Back in Yunnan, however, farmer Yan Hannei is thinking about
switching to other plants like vegetables.
"I am going to lose so much money this year," he says. "What can you
do? I can only stop growing corn and grow something else."
(Reporting by Hallie Gu and Ryan Woo; additional reporting by
Beijing Newsroom; Editing by Tom Daly, Christian Schmollinger and
Richard Pullin)
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