Defining biotechnological solutions for insect control in sub-Saharan Africa
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Date
Authors
Botha, Anna-Maria
Kunert, Karl J.
Maling’a, Joyce
Foyer, Christine H.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Wiley Open Access
Abstract
Africa is burdened by food insecurity with nearly a billion people suffering from starvation,
undernutrition, and malnutrition. Climate change prediction models forecast
changes in rainfall patterns and rising temperature regimes, with impacts particularly
on Southern and East Africa. These predictions are especially concerning for the
production of major food crops, such as maize, sorghum, millet, and groundnut, because
median temperature increases are associated with increased pest pressure and
changes in migratory patterns. These factors will result in significantly more pest
invasions and an increased need for innovative insect management practices. This
review focuses on pest control strategies, highlighting important examples, their economic
impact, and new alternative pest control strategies. African policymakers remain
hesitant to move forward with establishing biosafety laws and commercializing
GM crops, and it is often difficult to implement regulatory measures in smallholder
agriculture to increase efficacy.
Description
Keywords
Biotechnology, Climate change, CRISPR/Cas, Diuraphis noxia, Fall armyworm, Integrated pest management, Invasive pests, iRNA, Resistance breeding, Russian wheat aphid, Spodoptera frugiperda
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Botha A.-M., Kunert K.J., Maling’a J., Foyer C.H. Defining biotechnological
solutions for insect control in sub-Saharan Africa. Food
Energy Security 2020;9:e191. https://doi.org/10.1002/fes3.191.
