The migrant insect can feed on most important crops in India like maize, rice, sugarcane, soybean, onion, potato and cotton, among others.
Mysuru: A new migrant insect that can potentially cause losses to dozens of crops has been found in Karnataka. The pest has been damaging maize plants in certain parts of the state, and is not a native and known species in India, scientists from the University of Agricultural Sciences, Bengaluru have reported.
The pest, Spodoptera frugiperda, is a species of armyworm hitherto not found in India. It was first observed during May-June period in maize crops near Gowribidnur in Chikkaballapur district of Karnataka when scientists were investigating crop loss due to caterpillars. It caused extensive damage in the maize crops there.
“It took some time for rearing the larvae collected from the field,” says Prabhu Ganiger, a researcher at the Department of Entomology of the University. The larvae collected from fields were reared in the laboratory for authentic identification. “We found it is difficult to rear them in the lab because they turn cannibalistic eating each other in captivity,” he explains. Finally, after a month or so we could get the adult and based on their appearance the insect was identified as Spodoptera frugiperda
Spodoptera frugiperda is a known pest in parts of North America from Canada to Chile and Argentina. It has also been reported to have spread to Africa in 2017, causing widespread crop damage. However, so far nobody had reported its presence in Asia.