Brazil declares emergency as caterpillars attack crops

Reading Time: < 1 minute

Published: November 18, 2013

Infestations of the helicoverpa caterpillar in Brazil’s grain belt prompted the agriculture ministry on Monday to declare a state of emergency in the leading soy state of Mato Grosso, highlighting the potential risk to large parts of the crop.

The ministry’s head of supply, Antonio Andrade, also declared an emergency in the state of Bahia, a smaller but important producer state where difficulty controlling pests caused financial losses for producers last year.

State governments will draw up guidelines for dealing with the pest that is believed to be a serious threat to crops.

Read Also

Bill Biligetu, forage crop breeder at the University of Saskatchewan, studies the purple flowers found in the alfalfa plots at Ag in Motion, a farm show held July 15-17 near Langham, Sask. Biligetu is hoping to design an alfalfa variety with more tolerance to drought. Photo: Robert Arnason

Research focuses on drought tolerant alfalfa

Exotic alfalfa varieties that produce white, blue, cream and yellow flowers are being looked at by plant breeders to improve the crop’s drought tolerance.

Production costs in areas where the caterpillar is most prominent are going to rise for farmers as fighting the pest often involves multiple applications of insecticide and destruction of plant material that hosts the caterpillar.

Brazil, one of the world’s biggest exporters of soybeans and corn after the U.S., is nearly finished planting what is expected to be a record soy and bumper corn crop that will start harvest in early 2014.

The caterpillar can also destroy cotton crops.

— Reporting for Reuters by Reese Ewing in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

explore

Stories from our other publications