Accra, Jan. 21, – Mr Delali
Nutsukpo, the Greater Accra Regional Director of the Agriculture, has said it
is untrue that the Fall Army worm outbreak was developed in foreign
laboratories.
He said as far back as 1797 in
Georgia USA, the worms were discovered and was only known to that part of the
world until their recent migration to southern and lately West African
countries.
Mr Nutsukpo said “the pest has
come to stay, and we only have to put in place interventions and programmes
that would control their rate of destruction and ensure food security in the
country”.
The Director was speaking during
an engagement by the Department of Agriculture with the Media on “Reporting on
Fall Army Worm” for Journalists from the Volta, Central, Greater Accra and the Western
Regions to deepen media knowledge and ensure accurate reporting on the matter.
The Fall Army worm canker became
an area of concern in 2016 and 2017 where large tracts of farmlands
particularly cereals were destroyed by the worms.
It is a migratory moth which
could attack about 80 species with its larvae, but in Ghana, the pest had
become a maize threat to food security because they are largely found in
cereal-maize which could be harvested and stored for a longer time.
The government therefore set up
the national task force to find ways and means of controlling the situation.
Dr Nii Okai Hammond, a member of
the National Taskforce, said the team together with the Ministry was working to
ensure that insecticide distribution was fairly carried out, capacity of the
farmers built on early detection and management as well as regular monitoring.
So far, three pesticides have
been discovered to effectively control the fall army worm and would soon hit
the market for farmers to use.
Dr Sagre Bambangi, Deputy Minister
of Agriculture, said it is important to create awareness on the pest
infestation especially this cropping season and also educate farmers on the
concern.
He said the Ministry was
implementing a strategy for the 2018 cropping season by strengthening the
national pests surveillance system, conduct research into the biological
control and establish a strategic stock of pesticides in the regions.
GNA

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