It’s like a sequel to the 1998 hit film, A Bug’s Life. In the original Hollywood movie, Flik the ant is trying to recruit tough warriors to save thousands of his kin on Ant Island from the bad guys – marauding grasshoppers.
In the unfolding real-life sequel in India, the cast runs to trillions, of whom 1.3 billion are humans. The marauding short-horned grasshoppers – better known as locusts – arrived in May this year, each swarm running to millions. They devastated standing crops on close to a quarter of a million acres in Bihar, Gujarat, Madhya Pradesh, Rajasthan and, Uttar Pradesh, says the country’s Agriculture Commissioner.
These airborne aggressors render national borders irrelevant. Locusts exist across 30 countries and 16 million square kilometres from West Africa to India, according to the United Nations Food and Agriculture organisation (FAO). And a small locust swarm – 1 square kilometres with about 40 million members –can eat the same amount of food in a day as 35,000 people, 20 camels or six elephants.
Not surprising then that the national Locust Warning Organisation draws its members from defence, agriculture, home affairs, science and technology, civil aviation and communication ministries.
Locusts, however, are not the only villains in the emerging script as the delicate balance between millions of insects is thrown into jeopardy. In India, entomologists and Adivasi and other farmers are lining up the bad guys: multiple and sometimes alien species. Good guys – ‘beneficial pests’ friendly to food production – can also become bad guys when changing climate plays havoc with their habitat.










