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ZIMBABWE:
Outbreak of voracious armyworm potentially devastating
IRIN News
Janaury 13, 2006
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=51107
JOHANNESBURG
- An outbreak of armyworm threatens Zimbabwe's already fragile agricultural
sector and experts warn that a shortage of foreign currency may
hamper importation of much-needed pesticides.
Zimbabwe's Agricultural Research and Extension Services (AREX) director
Shadreck Mlambo told IRIN, "We do have an armyworm situation here,
and we're still trying to consolidate all the reports that are coming
in from different parts of the country to be able to judge the extent
of it. For now, all I can say is that all provinces except Matabeleland
South have been affected."
Dzarira Kwenda, executive director of the Zimbabwe Farmers Union,
said the situation was potentially devastating for both small- and
large-scale farmers, "because the foreign currency needed to import
chemicals is in short supply".
He said the Mashonaland Central and Mashonaland East provinces were
most affected and farmers there could possibly lose "thousands of
hectares" of crops to the voracious pest.
The outbreak comes as young maize crops are beginning to sprout,
a time when they are particularly vulnerable to the armyworm caterpillar,
Dr Clive Levy of the Commercial Farmers Union.
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