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Locust plague hits Spain-sized area of eastern Australia

15 April 2010 [15:07] - TODAY.AZ
Swarms of locusts have infested a huge area of eastern Australia roughly the size of Spain after recent floods, ravaging farmland.
Chris Adriaansen, head of the Australian Plague Locust Commission, said the quick-breeding creatures had hit from Longreach in Queensland in the north-east to Melbourne and Adelaide - 190,000 square miles.

"What we've got certainly is a very large and widespread infestation," he told AFP. "It's simply a reflection of the fact that we've had widespread rain across that entire area."

Mr Adriaansen said some swarms covered areas as large as 115 square miles, with about 10 locusts per square yard, "that's a lot of locusts."

Local media said the insects had already wiped out thousands of acres of crops and were also damaging grazing areas and gardens in the key agricultural area.

"One farmer has about 400 hectares (1,000 acres) which will have to be resown," Graham Falconer, an agronomist in the town of Forbes, told public broadcaster ABC. "The locusts are doing considerable damage."

Mr Adriaansen said the insects, which had destroyed some early planned cereal crops but mostly fed on pasture, were set to multiply in coming months as their offspring hatch.

"Come the middle of September through to October across that entire inland area... we expect there to be some very large infestations again," he said.

Swarms are expected in southern Queensland and northern New South Wales, areas which last month were flooded after heavy rains broke almost a decade of drought.


/Telegraph.co.uk/
URL: http://www.today.az/news/interesting/66150.html

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