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Ministry to Assist Farmers Affected by Beet Armyworm

By: , May 3, 2017

The Key Point:

The Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agriculture and Fisheries is assessing the impact of the beet armyworm on farmers in the Duff House/New Forest Agro Park and surrounding areas of Mancheste
Ministry to Assist Farmers Affected by Beet Armyworm
Photo: Barbara Ellington
Minister without Portfolio in the Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agriculture and Fisheries, Hon. J.C. Hutchinson (left), is shown the damage done to his scallion farm by the beet armyworm, by Ralden Bellanfante, when the Minister stopped at his farm in the Duff House/New Forest Agro Park in Manchester, on May 1.

The Facts

  • The Rural Agricultural Development Authority (RADA) conducted a preliminary estimate, which was turned over to the Ministry.
  • Minister without Portfolio in the Ministry, Hon. J.C. Hutchinson, toured some 12 of the affected farms on Monday, May 1, to get a first-hand look at the damage and offer advice regarding the road to recovery.

The Full Story

The Ministry of Industry, Commerce, Agriculture and Fisheries is assessing the impact of the beet armyworm on farmers in the Duff House/New Forest Agro Park and surrounding areas of Manchester.

This is being done so that a decision can be taken as to how best to assist the farmers who have lost some 150 acres of scallion, tomato, cucumber, callaloo, onion and beetroot to the deadly beet armyworm. Between 200 and 300 more acres are being impacted by the worm.

The Rural Agricultural Development Authority (RADA) conducted a preliminary estimate, which was turned over to the Ministry.

Most of the land in the Duff House/New Forest Agro Park will have to be rehabilitated before farmers can plant the same crop again.

Minister without Portfolio in the Ministry, Hon. J.C. Hutchinson, toured some 12 of the affected farms on Monday, May 1, to get a first-hand look at the damage and offer advice regarding the road to recovery.

Speaking to JIS News after the tour, the Minister said that from his observation, farmers have not been observing best practices.

“Some of the farmers have left up the farms to the beet armyworms and the worms have migrated to the unaffected farms and done their damage,” Mr. Hutchinson said.

“We have to get the information out to the farmers quickly. To really control the pest now, we have to plough the land so that the birds can come in and eat the worms; then after the soil is rested, the farmers will have to do some crop rotation,” the Minister emphasised.

He said the farmers need to change their culture of simply abandoning a farm because it is infested by the beet armyworm.

The Minister told the farmers that abandoned farms still have the worms in the ground and these worms just move on to another farm.

Already, the beet armyworm has reached St. Elizabeth where 50 acres have been affected. To mitigate against further damage, a team from RADA is now conducting a series of training sessions to teach the farmers how to deal with the worms.

During the tour, the Minister and his team also visited the packaging and storage facility for agricultural produce, which is currently under construction and should be completed in another three months.

The beet armyworm eats the leaves, stems and flowers of the plants, causing them to wither and die.

To help stop the spread of the deadly pest, farmers must walk through their farms daily, look for signs of eggs on the leaves of their crops, and then spray the field.

They should also purchase pheromone septa detectors that will reveal the presence of the pests and that will alert them to spray their fields.

Last Updated: May 3, 2017

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