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Strengthening Madagascar’s capacities for better locust management










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    Response to the locust plague in Madagascar Campaign 2014/15
    Final Report September 2014 - August 2015
    2016
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    The current Malagasy Migratory Locust plague began in April 2012. Crops (mainly rice) and pastures were at risk of considerable damage from this locust plague, which could have had a significant negative impact on domestic supply and grain prices. In view of the scale of the plague, it was estimated that the food security of 13 million people (60 percent of the population) could be affected without large-scale locust control operations. To tackle this catastrophic situation, the Food and Agricul ture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) and the Ministry of Agriculture (MoA) of Madagascar developed jointly a Three-year Emergency Programme in response to the plague in December 2012.
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    Response to the locust plague in Madagascar Campaign 2014/15
    Interim Report N. 1, September 2014 – February 2015
    2015
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    The overall objective of the Programme is to contribute to safeguarding the food security of the most vulnerable rural populations in Madagascar. The specific objective of the 2014/15 campaign is to support the decline of the Malagasy Migratory Locust plague and thus limit damage to crops and pastures. Achieving this objective will reduce the geographical scope and size of the areas infested and contaminated by the Malagasy Migratory Locust outside the Outbreak Area, as well as the number and si ze of grouped locust populations (hopper bands and swarms), and trigger the degregarization of these populations. The implemented strategy includes identifying locust population hotspots, regularly monitoring their dynamics (mostly by aerial surveys to establish forecasts that are as accurate as possible) and deploying and making the best use of available control means in accordance with best practices in agriculture, human health and the environment.
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    Response to the locust plague in Madagascar Campaign 2013/14
    Interim Report N. 1 September 2013 - February 2014
    2014
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    The overall objective of the Programme is to safeguard the food security of rural populations in Madagascar. The specific objective of the first year of the Programme (i.e. from September 2013 to August 2014) is to stem the dynamics of the Malagasy Migratory Locust populations. The strategy will include identifying the hotspots of the locust populations, regularly monitoring these populations to establish accurate forecast and deploying and doing the best use of available control means according to good practices in agriculture, human health and the environment.

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