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Windborne displacements of Desert Locusts from Africa to the Caribbean and South America
Authors:Jane Rosenberg  Peter J.A. Burt
Affiliation:(1) Natural Resources Institute, University of Greenwich, Central Avenue, Chatham Maritime, Kent, ME4 4TB, UK
Abstract:The Desert Locust is a major pest of agriculture in Africa, the Middle East and South-West Asia and swarms are known to make downwind flights over hundreds and thousands of kilometres between seasonal breeding areas. At the end of summer in 1988, swarms of locusts were moving north and south along the western margins of North Africa and in October and November, swarms crossed the Atlantic Ocean and invaded the Caribbean and neighbouring parts of South America for the first recorded time. Because of the extent of the migration and the evolutionary significance of linkages between Old and New World species of locusts, the weather associated with the migrations was studied and trajectory analysis was used to identify the source areas and estimate the flight times. Locusts were moving offshore from western North Africa throughout the autumn and on three occasions migrated west of 40° W with easterly Trade winds. Two trans-Atlantic crossings coincided with the passage of easterly waves. Over 100 trajectories were constructed at 950 and 850 hPa and within the time limit used (le 144-h), 28% successfully linked source and receptor areas. Minimum trajectory duration was 93-h, which is one-and-a-half times longer than the previously longest flight duration, derived for a similar migration to the British Isles in 1954. Upwind trajectories from the arrival areas, identified sources between 27 and 6° N in Africa, with most end-points located in Mauritania, Senegal, Gambia and Guinea-Bissau. Interspersed with the Atlantic crossings were a northward movement of locusts and an incursion of Saharan dust into Europe within the circulations of frontal depressions. While offshore migrations from northern Africa are common in autumn, the immigrants in the Caribbean and South America were probably at the extreme limits of flight endurance for the species. The results tend to confirm earlier hypotheses that New World species of locusts may have evolved from ancestral migrants from Africa.
Keywords:Atlantic Ocean  flight-duration  Locust  long-distance migration  Schistocerca gregaria  trajectory analysis
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