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Grasshoppers Compete for Forage Crops, Leaving Western Agriculture at Loss

AFBF Staff

photo credit: North Carolina Farm Bureau, Used with Permission


Grasshoppers and Mormon crickets are back this summer, causing considerable damage to rangelands and forage in western states. The insects cause $318 million in crop losses to alfalfa annually, according to a report by the American Farm Bureau Federation.

Grasshopper defoliation competes with cattle and other herbivores for forage, affecting crops such as wheat and alfalfa. Soybeans and corn in the Midwest also receive considerable damage from this pest. In areas receiving less than 30 inches of annual rainfall, there is an increased likelihood of infestation, leading to substantial crop losses, said Daniel Munch, an economist at AFBF.

"Between 2019 and 2023, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) protected over 3.33 million acres across eight Western states, with 2.8 million acres treated for grasshopper control," said Munch.

This issue is intensified in western lands, where almost 10% of farmers are affected. “Swarms aren’t quite as big as they were in the 1800s, but grasshoppers and Mormon crickets remain a persistent risk to agriculture,” Munch said.

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