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Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
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Alternative Versions
Tags
Acrtionl Field
Area
Border-spanning
Campaign
Destruction
Emergencies
FAO
Farmers
Farmlands
Government
Locusts
Mission
Subregion
Swarms
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Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
Desert locust, Kenya
Kenya, 2020. FAO ground team inspect after an aerial spraying
Desert locust, Kenya
Desert locust, Kenya
Desert locust, Kenya
Desert locust, Kenya
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Kenya, 2020. Campaign to combat locust upsurge in East Africa
22 January 2020, Ololokwe, Samburu county, Kenya - A locust swarm fly in the North-Eastern Kenya. The desert locusts have swarmed in Kenya from Somalia and Ethiopia, destroying farmlands.
Ravenous swarms threaten entire East Africa subregion. FAO scales up its emergency response with a massive, border-spanning campaign needed to combat locust upsurge in East Africa. Given the scale of the current swarms, aerial control is the only effective means to reduce the locust numbers.
Yellow locust are mature, and ready for mating and are laying eggs in the sand.
Pink locust are younger, and still need a lot of food (more dangerous for farms and green vegetation) to fully mature.
After laying eggs, small ones, next generation locust will be born after two weeks, approximately 200 newborns per mother locust. And so swarms will multiply.
01/22/2020
Credit
© FAO/Sven Torfinn
UNFAO Source
FAO Photo Library
File size
1.24 MB
Unique ID
UF13SP9
FAO. Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given.
Photo-Library@fao.org