What's new

Locust Swarms to be Countered With Innovative Chicken Attack

Zibago

ELITE MEMBER
Joined
Feb 21, 2012
Messages
37,006
Reaction score
12
Country
Pakistan
Location
Pakistan
Locust Swarms to be Countered With Innovative Chicken Attack
Posted 3 hours ago by Hasan Saeed
949.jpg



A pilot project in Pakistan could offer a way to deal with the biggest locust swarms in decades without resorting to harmful insecticides that harm people and the environment. The country was attacked last winter and another wave has hit the region and the threat will continue to rise till mid-summer.

The government approved a National Action Plan in February and currently, airborne spraying of over 300,000 liters of insecticide is underway.

“Towards the end of May and in June and July, high-level migration is expected,” said Tariq Khan, director of the Technical Department of Plant Protection in Pakistan’s Sindh province. Sohail Ahmed, an animal biologist at the University of Agriculture in Peshawar warned that the pesticides used by the government are carcinogenic to humans and poisonous to wildlife.

No bio-safe pesticide is being used at the moment. These chemical sprays are toxic to the environment and will affect humans, wildlife, and livestock.

Chicken Solution?
There might be a solution with an innovative pilot project in Okara which involves farmers earning money by trapping locusts that are transformed into high-protein chicken feed by feed mills. The idea came to Muhammad Khurshid, a civil servant in the Ministry of National Food Security and Research, and Johar Ali, a biotechnologist from the Pakistan Agricultural Research Council.

“We were mocked for doing this – no one thought that people could actually catch locusts and sell them,” says Ali. Khurshid said the idea came through Yemen where last year when the country faced famine, the motto was “Eat the locusts before they eat the crop.”

In the district, they did a three-day trial, the used the slogan, “Catch locusts. Earn money. Save crops”, while offering to pay farmers 20 Pakistani rupees (USD 0.12) per kilogram of locusts. The community caught seven tonnes a night with the team selling it to nearby plants making chicken feed. Farmers made over 20,000 Pakistani rupees (USD 125) per person for one night’s work.

Muhammad Athar, the general manager Hi-Tech Feeds, says his firm fed the bug-based feed to its broiler chickens in a five-week study. He says:

All nutritional aspects came out positive – there was no issue with the feed made from these locusts. If we can capture the locusts without spraying on them, their biological value is high and they have good potential for use in fish, poultry, and even dairy feed. We currently import 300,000 tonnes of soya bean and after extracting the oil for sale, we use the soya bean crush to use in animal feed. Soya bean has 45% protein whereas locusts have 70% protein. Soya bean meal is 90 Pakistani rupees per kilogram (USD 0.5), whereas locusts are free – the only cost is capturing them and drying them so they can be sold as a useable product.

What do you think? Let us know in the comments below.
https://propakistani.pk/2020/05/30/...vvpv_wsX-Ws91Tv8Wm0NsRqMmIz8udvW1O-hGXf6q84Gs
 
. .
Locust Swarms to be Countered With Innovative Chicken Attack
Posted 3 hours ago by Hasan Saeed
949.jpg



A pilot project in Pakistan could offer a way to deal with the biggest locust swarms in decades without resorting to harmful insecticides that harm people and the environment. The country was attacked last winter and another wave has hit the region and the threat will continue to rise till mid-summer.

The government approved a National Action Plan in February and currently, airborne spraying of over 300,000 liters of insecticide is underway.

“Towards the end of May and in June and July, high-level migration is expected,” said Tariq Khan, director of the Technical Department of Plant Protection in Pakistan’s Sindh province. Sohail Ahmed, an animal biologist at the University of Agriculture in Peshawar warned that the pesticides used by the government are carcinogenic to humans and poisonous to wildlife.

No bio-safe pesticide is being used at the moment. These chemical sprays are toxic to the environment and will affect humans, wildlife, and livestock.

Chicken Solution?
There might be a solution with an innovative pilot project in Okara which involves farmers earning money by trapping locusts that are transformed into high-protein chicken feed by feed mills. The idea came to Muhammad Khurshid, a civil servant in the Ministry of National Food Security and Research, and Johar Ali, a biotechnologist from the Pakistan Agricultural Research Council.

“We were mocked for doing this – no one thought that people could actually catch locusts and sell them,” says Ali. Khurshid said the idea came through Yemen where last year when the country faced famine, the motto was “Eat the locusts before they eat the crop.”

In the district, they did a three-day trial, the used the slogan, “Catch locusts. Earn money. Save crops”, while offering to pay farmers 20 Pakistani rupees (USD 0.12) per kilogram of locusts. The community caught seven tonnes a night with the team selling it to nearby plants making chicken feed. Farmers made over 20,000 Pakistani rupees (USD 125) per person for one night’s work.

Muhammad Athar, the general manager Hi-Tech Feeds, says his firm fed the bug-based feed to its broiler chickens in a five-week study. He says:

All nutritional aspects came out positive – there was no issue with the feed made from these locusts. If we can capture the locusts without spraying on them, their biological value is high and they have good potential for use in fish, poultry, and even dairy feed. We currently import 300,000 tonnes of soya bean and after extracting the oil for sale, we use the soya bean crush to use in animal feed. Soya bean has 45% protein whereas locusts have 70% protein. Soya bean meal is 90 Pakistani rupees per kilogram (USD 0.5), whereas locusts are free – the only cost is capturing them and drying them so they can be sold as a useable product.

What do you think? Let us know in the comments below.
https://propakistani.pk/2020/05/30/...vvpv_wsX-Ws91Tv8Wm0NsRqMmIz8udvW1O-hGXf6q84Gs
Great development. I said this in an earlier post. The protein shouldn't be wasted. I'm not keen on eating locusts....just feed them to farmed birds...I love tandoori chicken.
 
. . .
Loctus Hunters

500-1000 of these bad boys can do the job zap the critters in air
180819-drone-hunter-se-907p_b9f7776a5e4a1c6a9621437b37141535.fit-2000w.jpg


drone4.jpg



%E5%96%B73.jpg




300-400 plane sprayers
Put those K-8 to work
Gehling_PLZ106AR_Kruk_OTT_2013_D7N8976_004.jpg
 
Last edited:
. .
Just using plane sprayers is ok in advance locations where loctus is , the rain will wash it off the crops in few weeks time

Lease import , these babies from China and fly them 8 hours a day

1200px-Gehling_PZL-106_AR_Kruk_OTT_2013_D7N9017_009.jpg


32ba608d64554794e6012fb7c5248ef7.jpg


43-3-col-rotary-drone-1000x640.jpg


161f6cb30b8b4262a81c608454501b101.JPG
 
Last edited:
.
when will they do this,after all crops are destroyed by locusts,already large quantity of crops are badly affected by locusts due to lack of timely measures by authorities
 
.
We don't have a policy .....

If we had a policy , the planes would have been ordered / rented
and they would be flying over the locust location

3-4 weeks the problem would have been greatly reduced

These planes are low tech , ww1 technology
 
.
We don't have a policy .....

If we had a policy , the planes would have been ordered / rented
and they would be flying over the locust location

3-4 weeks the problem would have been greatly reduced

These planes are low tech , ww1 technology

Is this not becoming a big news in Pakistan TV program ? constant cover on News TV will force Government to do something substantial.
 
.
Pakistani channels show what ever the hightest bidder pays for , to show political talk shows time waste
 
.
The idea in the OP seems generally good but I wonder about any disease carried by the locusts which may transfer to the chicken who eat them.
 
. . .

Pakistan Defence Latest Posts

Pakistan Affairs Latest Posts

Back
Top Bottom