Tuesday, April 19, 2022

Unprecedented 'Plague' Of Locusts In South Africa

AFRICA: UNPRECEDENTED “PLAGUE” OF LOCUSTS ON PASSOVER; A POTENTIAL SIGN OF MESSIAH




While Jews remembered the story of the Exodus from Egypt, South Africa was experiencing a real-life plague of locusts marking the worst infestation it had suffered in decades with local media reporting the swarms as appearing “in Biblical proportions”.

The outbreak of brown locusts is now affecting the provinces of the Eastern Cape, Northern Cape and Western Cape.

According to the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), this was the worst invasion in 70 years.  

Solitary, non-swarming brown locusts are always present in the region and some eggs hatch with very little rainfall. The female locusts lay eggs in dry soil and the eggs can cope with a lack of water. Eggs can remain in the soil for at least one to two years in a dormant state, and maybe longer. The female locusts tend to lay their eggs in the same area year after year, creating a build-up of eggs in one area over the non-outbreak years. When rains do fall, the accumulated eggs all hatch. Due to the build-up of eggs, an exceptionally large number of locusts emerge and begin developing into the gregarious phase which will form the locust swarms.

The infestation began in September, getting progressively worse over the winter, exacerbated by heavy rains that came after a decade-long drought. The government is engaging in a program of spraying but this is being hampered by pandemic supply chain shortages. 

Swarms are often tens of square kilometers in size and a swarm of just one square kilometer eats the same amount of food in one day as 35,000 people. Swarms also can travel 93 miles a day making efforts to control an outbreak even more difficult.



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