Soil upgrade cuts locust damage and doubles yields in Senegal

Scientists collaborating with farmers in Senegal have demonstrated that enriching soil with nitrogen reduces damage from the Senegalese grasshopper and doubles millet harvests. This approach makes crops less attractive to the pests by altering their nutritional content. The findings, tested on real farms, offer a sustainable tool for managing migratory insects.

Locust swarms pose a persistent threat to global agriculture, capable of devastating crops over vast areas equivalent to major cities like New York or Phoenix. Arianne Cease, who leads Arizona State University's Global Locust Initiative, has spent over 15 years studying these insects and ways to mitigate their impact. Her team's latest research, published in Scientific Reports in 2026, reveals a simple soil-based strategy that curbs outbreaks.

The study focused on the Senegalese grasshopper, which frequently damages crops in smaller groups rather than forming massive swarms. Partnering with communities that had previously collaborated on smaller projects, researchers worked with 100 farmers across two Senegalese villages. Each farmer planted two millet plots: one treated with nitrogen fertilizer and one untreated.

Results showed clear benefits in the treated plots. They hosted fewer grasshoppers, exhibited less leaf damage, and yielded twice as much millet at harvest. Measurements taken three times during the growing season confirmed the reductions, with no increase in other pests.

Cease explained the mechanism: nutrient-poor soils produce plants high in carbohydrates but low in protein, creating a 'donut diet' ideal for locusts' energy needs during migration. Nitrogen enrichment shifts this balance, increasing protein and reducing carbs, which hinders the insects' ability to thrive.

"This breakthrough represents an important step forward in the sustainable management of migratory pests, offering a community-based tool that expands the available treatment options," Cease said.

Lead author Mamour Touré of Université Gaston Berger in Saint-Louis, Senegal, highlighted the practical value: "The results are of major importance to the scientific community and also to Senegalese farmers. The study gave them a better understanding of grasshoppers and locusts, as well as a practical way to control them at the local level."

While the trial used fertilizer, ongoing efforts emphasize compost for long-term sustainability. USAID funding ended in early 2025, yet farmers have adopted composting independently, abandoning the practice of burning crop residues. Touré noted: "Farmers unanimously stated that they no longer burn crop residues after land clearing, but instead practice composting to fertilize their fields, thereby helping to reduce grasshopper infestations."

The team now seeks funding to extend this method to other locust-affected regions. For the United States, which lacks native locusts but faces grasshopper pests like the 'Dirty Dozen' species, the research holds relevance. Cease warned of potential expansion from the Central American locust, predicting Texas could become suitable habitat in 10 to 15 years.

Verwandte Artikel

Close-up photo of mosquitoes attracted to a floral-scented engineered fungus on a leaf, highlighting research on mosquito control.
Bild generiert von KI

Engineered floral-scented fungus lures and kills mosquitoes, study finds

Von KI berichtet Bild generiert von KI Fakten geprüft

Researchers have engineered a mosquito-killing Metarhizium fungus that emits a flower-like scent, longifolene, to draw in the insects and infect them. The work, published October 24, 2025, in Nature Microbiology, could provide a safe, affordable complement to chemical pesticides amid rising mosquito-borne disease, the team says. ([doi.org](https://doi.org/10.1038/s41564-025-02155-9))

Two major crop pests, the cotton bollworm and corn earworm, have interbred in Brazil, creating hybrids resistant to multiple pesticides. This development poses risks to soya production and food security worldwide. Experts warn of potential yield losses and environmental impacts if the pests spread unchecked.

Von KI berichtet

New research reveals that sufficient nitrogen in soil allows tropical forests to recover twice as fast after deforestation. Scientists tracked regrowth in Central America over decades, finding nitrogen key to faster tree return and greater carbon capture. The findings suggest natural strategies for enhancing reforestation without fertilizers.

A new study shows that termites evolved complex social structures by losing genes rather than gaining them, with monogamy playing a key role. Researchers traced this evolution from cockroach ancestors to massive colonies. The findings challenge assumptions about social complexity in insects.

Von KI berichtet

In Brazil's shrinking Atlantic Forest, deforestation is causing mosquitoes to increasingly feed on humans, heightening the risk of diseases like dengue and Zika. A new study reveals that out of identified blood meals, most came from people rather than wildlife. This adaptation underscores how habitat loss alters disease transmission patterns.

Experten haben betont, dass die Aktualisierung des ägyptischen Agrargesetzes aufgrund zunehmender Herausforderungen wie Wasserknappheit und den Auswirkungen des Klimawandels dringend erforderlich ist. Der Aufruf erfolgte bei einer Abschlussveranstaltung eines Projekts zur Stärkung der Rolle des Privatsektors in der Landwirtschaft Oberägyptens. Die Teilnehmer unterstrichen die Notwendigkeit gesetzlicher Rahmenbedingungen zur Förderung der Lebensmittelsicherheit und Ressourceneffizienz.

Von KI berichtet

Alaa Farouk, Ägyptens Minister für Landwirtschaft und Landgewinnung, traf sich mit einer hochrangigen chinesischen Delegation, um die Entwicklungen bei einem Projekt für eine neue Fabrik zur Herstellung landwirtschaftlicher Pestizide zu besprechen. Das Treffen, an dem Hala Abou Youssef, Vorsitzende des Agrarpestizid-Ausschusses, teilnahm, fällt in den Rahmen der ägyptisch-chinesischen Zusammenarbeit. Das Vorhaben verspricht einen großen Schub für Ägyptens Agrarsektor durch fortschrittliche chinesische Technologie.

 

 

 

Diese Website verwendet Cookies

Wir verwenden Cookies für Analysen, um unsere Website zu verbessern. Lesen Sie unsere Datenschutzrichtlinie für weitere Informationen.
Ablehnen