Locust threat isn’t happening

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Published: February 14, 2002

Fears of grasshoppers that have locust, or swarming, tendencies are

nothing more than worried imaginings.

Late last summer grasshoppers that looked like locusts were discovered

in the region between Edmonton and the Saskatchewan border.

Dan Johnson, an entomologist at Agriculture Canada’s research centre in

Lethbridge, Alta., said there are no locusts in Western Canada, so the

fear of clouds of the hungry pests winging their way across prairie

crops on the wind can be dispensed with.

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“It is not evolutionary. The change is interesting but it doesn’t spell

disaster for prairie farmers …. there are genes in these grasshoppers

that are being triggered by we don’t what. This grasshopper has a big

genetic repertoire, but it is not the start of a mighty plague,” said

Johnson.

The lesser migratory grasshopper is growing longer wings and donning a

darker pigment on its head, reminiscent of locusts.

But the modification likely is a response to environmental stress.

Johnson said he can replicate the change in the laboratory, making the

grasshoppers take on the physical characteristics of the locusts, but

they do not swarm or act like their larger cousins.

He said the term locust applies to a type of grasshopper that will

change its wing, body size and pigmentation along with its behaviour

patterns when faced with overcrowding or loss of food sources.

Locusts transform from solitary creatures to swarming ones, either as

non-flying adolescents or as mature airborne insects. They inhabit

Australia, Africa and portions of Asia. One type of locust is found in

the southern United States and Central America, but does not exist at

northern latitudes.

The last time this behaviour was identified in prairie grasshoppers was

1947 when crops suffered through a summer drought similar to the one in

2001.

About the author

Michael Raine

Managing Editor, Saskatoon newsroom

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