EDHS Contemporary World Affairs

Members Login
Username 
 
Password 
    Remember Me  
Post Info TOPIC: Hungry caterpillars force Liberian emergency


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 81
Date:
Hungry caterpillars force Liberian emergency


(CNN) -- Liberia's president has declared a state of emergency after hordes of ravenous caterpillars infested the country.

The African armyworm caterpillar is chewing its way through Liberia's food crops.

The African armyworm caterpillar is chewing its way through Liberia's food crops

Tens of millions of the worm-like larvae have appeared in the northern part of the country, where they are destroying green crops like cabbage and collard greens and contaminating the water supply, Liberian Information Minister Laurance Bropleh told CNN Wednesday from the capital of Monrovia.

"I am not aware that they have been here before, ever, and certainly not in this great number," Bropleh told CNN. "That is why it was so overwhelming initially when we first discovered it."

The state of emergency covers the three northern Liberian counties of Bong, Lofa, and Gbarpolu, Liberian officials said.

President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf told legislators Monday that 350,000 people in 62 communities in those three counties may have been affected.

There are also indications the bugs have spread to neighboring Guinea, Sierra Leone and Ivory Coast, Bropleh said.

"This is indeed a crisis," the president said Monday. Johnson Sirleaf said she appointed a task force, including members of the U.N. Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO), to identify the species and commence spraying.

Investigators suspect the caterpillars are African armyworms, the FAO said.

The infestation is "quite alarming," said Winfred Hammond, the FAO representative in Liberia.

Hammond said the caterpillars started showing up sometime during the week of January 12 but spread quickly. In just a week, he said, the caterpillars had spread to 50 villages.

The pests multiply rapidly and adult moths are able to fly long distances at night, the FAO said.

Worsening the situation, the area's water supply has been contaminated by the huge volume of feces dropped by the caterpillars, the FAO said.

"The plague is being described as Liberia's worst in 30 years," the FAO said. "The last African armyworm outbreak in the sub-region occurred in Ghana in 2006."







HOW GROSS IS THAT???!!!!
bleh

__________________


Veteran Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 97
Date:

What a inconvenience this puts on vegatarians. just kidding, but really. Its an inconvenience for every beacuse the areas water supply is contaminated. Seems like things are going to get worse before it gets better. I wish them luck on stoping this plague. YES this is gross.

__________________
[B]- team suits.


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 119
Date:

thats really disgusting...
i hope they get and kill those nasty critters
before it really gets bad.

nasty. -_____-

__________________
nicole pak :)


Senior Member

Status: Offline
Posts: 147
Date:

those caterpillars look really gross and give me the hee-bee-jee-bee's.  to bad they don't turn into pretty butterflies... 

__________________
monica vellanoweth v(o_o)v 
"First you take the grahm.  You put the chocolate on the grahm. Then you roast a mallow.  When the mallows' flammin', you stick it on the chocolate.  Then you top with the other side."
- Ham: Sandlot
Page 1 of 1  sorted by
 
Quick Reply

Please log in to post quick replies.



Create your own FREE Forum
Report Abuse
Powered by ActiveBoard