Accra,
April 13, GNA - The Ministry of Food and Agriculture says it has
shifted its focus from synthetic insecticides to bio-rational products,
for the management of the Fall Armyworm (FAW) infestation, as part of
its short, medium and long-term management measures.The
focus on bio-rational products is to ensure minimum pest resistance by
the FAW, which is higher with the use of synthetic insecticides.Dr
Mrs Felicia Ansah, Director of Plant Protection and Regulatory Services
at MoFA, said this when she briefed Journalists on the current
situation of the FAW problem.She
noted that the FAW had come to stay, as it could not be completely
eradicated but managed, as in the case of Brazil, which had been
managing the FAW infestation for the past 40 years, and was currently
one of the biggest exporters of maize.Ghana had thus modelled its management measures after the Brazilian experience.These
measures, she said, include the deployment of pheromone trap catches in
various locations across the country to ascertain the levels of
infestation, training of MoFA staff and farmers on scouting, early
detection and sustainable management of the pest in the event of an
outbreak.She
explained that the best way to manage the infestation on farms was to
detect the pests early at the larvae stage, and not when they became
full grown moths. That is when they did the most damage to crops.Other
measures being undertaken by the Ministry are the distribution of
pesticides to all district offices in the country where farmers can
access in FAW infestations, the formation and training of Nnoboa
Spraying Teams in farming communities and intensification of public
awareness creation for farmers and the general public.According
to Dr Ansah, Ghana had commenced scouting of natural enemies of the
FAW, which once identified, will be reared to help reduce the population
of the pests.“In
the long term, only biological control agents, microbial insecticides
and botanicals/organic products will be used to manage FAW in Ghana,”
she said.She
said a total of 249,054 hectares of maize were affected and sprayed,
out of which 234,807 hectares recovered and 14, 247 totally destroyed in
the previous season, adding that there was a likelihood for more
infestations in the 2018 farming season.Dr
Ansah stressed the need for the media to be circumspect in how they
reported issues around the FAW infestation as it had implications for
trade.She urged the media to collaborate with the Ministry to educate farmers on how to manage the FAW.She
said the pockets of FAW infestations being currently experienced in
some districts in the Ashanti, Brong-Ahafo, Eastern, Volta and Western
Regions had been blown out of proportion as it was a pre-season
production infestation.“We
would like you to appreciate that this is a Phytosanitary or Public
Plant Health Issue, with trade implications and must be communicated in a
professional manner. Media coverage should rather be geared towards
improving the knowledge and skills of our farmers,” she said.