Insect infestation

An insect pest infestation is a recently detected insect pest population, including an incursion, or a sudden significant increase of an established insect, disease agents or weed population in an area leading to damage to plants in production fields, forests or natural habitats and causing substantial damage to productivity, biodiversity or natural resources (adapted from FAO, 2019).

Risk factors

Higher temperature, severe and extreme weather events and drought stress can all result in reduced vigour of trees, making them more vulnerable to outbreaks of native and introduced pests and diseases. For example, the dieback of millions of hectares of pine forests caused by outbreaks of native bark beetles in Central America, Europe and North America is associated with climate change, impacts of extreme weather events, and, in some cases, inadequate forest management practices (FAO, 2020b).

Favourable climatic conditions, disruption of ecosystems and negligence of crop/forest hygiene contribute to growth in insect populations which can cause substantial damage regularly. In many cases, long distance spread of insects results from transportation of infested goods.

Risk reduction measures

Following principles of sustainable plant production, sustainable forest management and integrated pest management practices are the best approach for control, focusing on diversified production systems, regular surveillance, preparedness before potential outbreaks, and a rapid response to prevent escalation to unmanageable scales (Guzewich et al., 1997). Post disaster needs assessment (PDNA) is designed to evaluate immediate needs for recovery and restoration for better disaster response (HIP).

Latest Insect infestation additions in the Knowledge Base

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Update

'Now is the season to intensify the campaign against disaster. We have to have a serious programmes in disaster mitigation to sustain the no-life-lost thrust of the city government,' said Herbert Bautista. The city noted a 'no casualty' record from the heavy rains during storm Falcon, reports the Manila Bulletin...

Manila Bulletin Publishing Corporation
Photo copyright by Flickr user, Julien Harneis, Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.0 Generic (CC BY-NC-ND 2.0)
Update

Over 42 million people across the world were forced to flee due to disasters triggered by sudden-onset natural hazards in 2010, according to a new study by the Norwegian Refugee Council’s Geneva-based Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre...

Norwegian Refugee Council
Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC)
Documents and publications

This study finds that 17 million people were newly displaced by sudden-onset disasters worldwide in 2009, and over 42 million people in 2010. To meet this challenge, the study recommends that greater collaboration is required between those working in the

Norwegian Refugee Council
Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre (IDMC)
Update

Experts warn that a significant increase in the numbers of brown hoppers, a rice pest, in central Thailand, threatens production. Thai authorities are looking for regional and practical solutions to manage and prevent future outbreaks...

The New Humanitarian
Update

A major, month-long control campaign will be necessary starting in advance of Madagascar's upcoming rainy season, which begins in mid-October, to stop locust numbers from growing and prevent them from reaching plague proportions...

Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations - Headquarters
Documents and publications

This edition analyses the 2009 disaster figures based on the EM-DAT database, with comparisons to previous years, providing an evidence base to the international community on the burden of disease and related health issues due to disasters and conflicts

World Health Organization (WHO)
Centre for Research on the Epidemiology of Disasters (CRED)
Université Catholique de Louvain, Institut de Recherche Santé et Société
Documents and publications

This book sets out a compelling argument for including ecosystem-based approaches to mitigation and adaptation as a third essential pillar in national strategies to address climate change, as such ecosystem-based strategies can offer cost-effective

World Bank, the
Update

Bolivia will be battered on five fronts by climate change, according to a new report published by Oxfam International today. The report underlines what is at stake at UN climate talks in Barcelona and an EU-US Summit in Washington today...

Oxfam International Secretariat
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