![Drought puts Alberta farmers at risk of another scourge of grasshoppers](https://i.cbc.ca/1.7174514.1713214795!/fileImage/httpImage/image.jpg_gen/derivatives/16x9_620/two-striped-grasshopper.jpg)
Drought puts Alberta farmers at risk of another scourge of grasshoppers
CBC
Will Muller knew immediately that he had a grasshopper problem last spring.
Dealing with drought conditions at his farm near the town of Bow Island in southern Alberta last year, he could see the insects hopping all over the fields where he grows lentils, durum wheat, canola and beans.
"If you went into the field, you drove in there and the grasshoppers would be flying everywhere, which I'd never seen," Muller said.
"You could see the chewing on the plants right away as well and the leaves being chewed on."
Grasshoppers thrive in hot, dry conditions that are already putting many farmers and ranchers on edge across Alberta. With parts of the province at heightened risk of another bad outbreak in 2024, it's a waiting game to see how many insects take wing, potentially putting even more pressure on farm operations.
As of the end of March, Alberta's worst drought hotspots are in east-central and southeast Alberta, as well as a growing area of the Peace River region in the northwest.
Some grasshopper species are major agricultural pests, emerging in the spring from eggs laid the previous summer, and gobbling up crops. And after major grasshopper outbreaks in parts of Alberta last year, there are plenty of eggs now lying in wait.
Meghan Vankosky, a field crop entomology research scientist with Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada, said she saw some of the problems first-hand when surveying in west-central Saskatchewan, where grasshoppers were also an issue last year.
"They get caught in the wind and blow back into your face, and it hurts to get smacked in the face by a grasshopper flying through the air, especially when they're big," she said.
When grasshopper outbreaks are bad enough, they can decimate crop yields.
"It's just terrible for farmers, because there's nothing they can really do after a certain point," Vankosky said.
"Toward the end of the summer, as far as you would look into a wheat field, you couldn't see any plants with leaves. It was just like the central stalk and this poor little wheat head trying to develop with no foliage at all."
Grasshopper counts are conducted every summer across the Prairies, and the results help set a risk rating for the following year.
This year's provincial forecast notes that one problem species in northern Alberta, the Bruner's spur-throated grasshopper, has a two-year life cycle. After outbreaks last year, that means they aren't expected to pop up in large numbers in 2024 — but there could still be other pest species present.