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Global perspectives and transdisciplinary opportunities for locust and grasshopper pest management and research

Ries, Mira Word; Adriaansen, Chris; Aldobai, Shoki; Berry, Kevin; Bal, Amadou Bocar; Catenaccio, Maria Cecilia; Cigliano, Maria Marta; Cullen, Darron A.; Deveson, Ted; Diongue, Aliou; Foquet, Bert; Hadrich, Joleen; Hunter, David; Johnson, Dan L.; Karnatz, Juan Pablo; Lange, Carlos E.; Lawton, Douglas; Lazar, Mohammed; Latchininsky, Alexandre V.; Lecoq, Michel; Le Gall, Marion; Lockwood, Jeffrey; Manneh, Balanding; Overson, Rick; Peterson, Brittany F.; Piou, Yril; Poot-Pech, Mario A.; Robinson, Brian E.; Rogers, Stephen M.; Song, Hojun; Springate, Simon; Therville, Clara; Trumper, Eduardo; Waters, Cathy; Woller, Derek A.; Youngblood, Jacob P.; Zhang, Long; Cease, Arianne

Authors

Mira Word Ries

Chris Adriaansen

Shoki Aldobai

Kevin Berry

Amadou Bocar Bal

Maria Cecilia Catenaccio

Maria Marta Cigliano

Ted Deveson

Aliou Diongue

Bert Foquet

Joleen Hadrich

David Hunter

Dan L. Johnson

Juan Pablo Karnatz

Carlos E. Lange

Douglas Lawton

Mohammed Lazar

Alexandre V. Latchininsky

Michel Lecoq

Marion Le Gall

Jeffrey Lockwood

Balanding Manneh

Rick Overson

Brittany F. Peterson

Yril Piou

Mario A. Poot-Pech

Brian E. Robinson

Stephen M. Rogers

Hojun Song

Simon Springate

Clara Therville

Eduardo Trumper

Cathy Waters

Derek A. Woller

Jacob P. Youngblood

Long Zhang

Arianne Cease



Abstract

Locusts and other migratory grasshoppers are transboundary pests. Monitoring and control, therefore, involve a complex system made up of social, ecological, and technological factors. Researchers and those involved in active management are calling for more integration between these siloed but often interrelated sectors. In this paper, we bring together 38 coauthors from six continents and 34 unique organizations, representing much of the social-ecological-technological system (SETS) related to grasshopper and locust management and research around the globe, to introduce current topics of interest and review recent advancements. Together, the paper explores the relationships, strengths, and weaknesses of the organizations responsible for the management of major locust-affected regions. The authors cover topics spanning humanities, social science, and the history of locust biological research and offer insights and approaches for the future of collaborative sustainable locust management. These perspectives will help support sustainable locust management, which still faces immense challenges such as fluctuations in funding, focus, isolated agendas, trust, communication, transparency, pesticide use, and environmental and human health standards. Arizona State University launched the Global Locust Initiative (GLI) in 2018 as a response to some of these challenges. The GLI welcomes individuals with interests in locusts and grasshoppers, transboundary pests, integrated pest management, landscape-level processes, food security, and/or cross-sectoral initiatives.

Citation

Ries, M. W., Adriaansen, C., Aldobai, S., Berry, K., Bal, A. B., Catenaccio, M. C., Cigliano, M. M., Cullen, D. A., Deveson, T., Diongue, A., Foquet, B., Hadrich, J., Hunter, D., Johnson, D. L., Karnatz, J. P., Lange, C. E., Lawton, D., Lazar, M., Latchininsky, A. V., Lecoq, M., …Cease, A. (2024). Global perspectives and transdisciplinary opportunities for locust and grasshopper pest management and research. Journal of Orthoptera Research, 33(2), 169-216. https://doi.org/10.3897/jor.33.112803

Journal Article Type Review
Acceptance Date Mar 1, 2024
Publication Date May 20, 2024
Deposit Date Nov 18, 2024
Publicly Available Date Nov 18, 2024
Journal Journal of Orthoptera Research
Print ISSN 1082-6467
Electronic ISSN 1937-2426
Publisher Pensoft Publishers
Peer Reviewed Peer Reviewed
Volume 33
Issue 2
Pages 169-216
DOI https://doi.org/10.3897/jor.33.112803
Public URL https://hull-repository.worktribe.com/output/4920201

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