Kelly
(30
June 2009)
"Hordes of hungry grasshoppers invade Utah"
Hordes of hungry grasshoppers invade Utah
AP – Hoards of grasshoppers are seen jumping in the grass beside a barn in Tooele, Utah Wednesday, June 24, …
By MIKE STARK, Associated Press Writer – Mon Jun 29, 7:00 am ET
TOOELE,
Utah – An ambitious director might look at Mitch Halligan's property
and see an instant B-movie classic: "Invasion of the Grasshoppers."
The
place is overrun with the greasy little bugs. With each step you take
on his property, the squirmy inch-long grasshoppers jump for cover in
every direction. Those that don't crunch under foot perch themselves
atop tall grass stalks, crawl up pant legs or munch through gardens.
Across
the road isn't much better. Grasshoppers blanketed the neighbors'
entryway a few days ago and forced them to come in through the back
door.
"I'd call this the closest that I've seen to a plague in a long time," Halligan said.
Grasshoppers
are regular summer visitors and a perennial crop-eating pest for
farmers, but this year's invasion in Tooele County west of Salt Lake
City is worse than anyone can remember. Tooele County commissioners
have been swamped with calls about grasshoppers, particularly by people
living next to undeveloped land where grasshoppers hatch — sometimes up
to 2,000 per square foot.
"There's like 100 times more grasshoppers
than what we're used to," said Bruce Clegg, a county commissioner whose
family has lived in the area for generations.
Many of the culprits
this year are clear-winged grasshoppers, which began hatching several
weeks ago and have moved like an unyielding wave across the parts of
the landscape ever since.
Northeast of Tooele, the grasshoppers
showed up suddenly and attacked Leana Jackson's backyard garden,
infiltrated her lawn and even found their way into her house and car.
"They're just a nuisance," Jackson said.
Alone,
the brown and tan grasshoppers are small and more likely to tickle than
terrify. But in large numbers — and they almost always come in large
numbers — they are a hungry force to be reckoned with as they search
for grasses and other plants to eat.
"Just their sheer abundance can
make them a pretty destructive insect," said Clint Burfitt, an
entomologist with the Utah Department of Agriculture and Food.
His
office estimates that grasshoppers have hit about 250,000 acres in Utah
this year. That's slightly more than the estimate at the end of 2008.
Grasshoppers
come and go in seven- to 10-year cycles, said Larry Lewis, a spokesman
for the Utah agriculture department. The overall numbers in Utah may
not be that high — more than 1.4 million acres were infested in 2001 —
but grasshoppers are drawing more attention this year as they move from
farms to expanding suburban neighborhoods.
That's where many of the
calls for help are coming from, said Linden Greenhalgh, the Utah State
University extension agent in Tooele County whose running tally of
calls about grasshoppers this summer nears 300. People with houses that
abut wild open areas where grasshoppers hatch are "sitting ducks" for
the little invaders, he said.
"They'll come in and devour their landscapes," he said.
Part
of the reason for this year's infestation is the upswing of their
normal cycle. But dry weather for several years, and a wet June this
year that provides plentiful food for this year's hatch, also play a
role.
Plentiful populations have residents flicking them off their
clothing, spraying several times a week and killing scores as they
drive down the road.
"I think you could say it's the worst-ever in
Tooele County. I don't think it'd be a stretch to say that," Greenhalgh
said. Tooele County sits in a valley about 30 miles west of Salt Lake
City.
He and others have been scrambling to respond. Already,
they've sprayed about 18,000 acres with a poison that targets
grasshoppers' ability to grow in their own exoskeleton.
Arriving
with the grasshoppers have been flocks of hungry seagulls keen on
bite-sized grasshopper snacks. That's a strange if welcome sight —
seagulls are Utah's state bird, beloved for reportedly feasting on
infesting crickets that were threatening Mormon settlers' food supplies
in 1848. Even people's chickens, which normally gobble up as many
grasshoppers as they can catch each spring and summer, can't keep up.
But even birds and poisons probably won't be enough.
The
grasshoppers, most of which aren't yet to the adult stage, will only
grow bigger, and possibly more abundant, as the summer wears on,
Halligan said.
Kelly