FAONEWSRELEASE 04/146 E
Countries should closely monitor
the situation and undertake any necessary control - no reason to panic
Rome, 19 November 2004 -- FAO has alerted Israel, the West Bank and Gaza, Saudi Arabia and Sudan of the possibility of a few desert locust swarms arriving from northern Egypt.
"It is possible that a small number of locust swarms could arrive in these countries," said Mahmoud Solh, Director, Plant Production and Protection Division. "Countries should not expect successive waves of swarms like in the Maghreb countries; there is definitely no reason to panic," he said.
FAO called upon countries to look out for any locust swarms and undertake control operations as early as possible.
Locust swarms originally came from the Sahel summer breeding areas and moved into Libya on strong winds from the south west. They invaded northern Egypt earlier this month and also dramatically appeared in Cairo.
Swarms have now moved further east towards the Sinai, the Gulf of Suez and the Red Sea.
Locusts have already arrived on the Mediterranean coast of northern Sinai, 100 kilometres west of Gaza.
Although desert locust control operations are under way in Egypt, there is a risk that some of the swarms could attack crops. "But these swarms are highly mobile and crop damage is expected to be limited," Solh said.
FAO is closely monitoring the situation to see if swarms will move south along the Red Sea to their traditional winter breeding areas along the coastal plains of southern Egypt, Sudan and Saudi Arabia. If this occurs and if there is rainfall during the upcoming winter, locust numbers could significantly increase in these areas.
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