Publication | Open Access
Fall armyworm invasion in Sub-Saharan Africa and impacts on community sustainability in the wake of Coronavirus Disease 2019: reviewing the evidence
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Citations
33
References
2023
Year
Virus EpidemiologyAgricultural EconomicsRecent Empirical LiteratureDisease OutbreakCovid-19Infectious Disease EcologySustainable AgricultureDisease ControlResilient Food SystemsEmerging Infectious DiseasePublic HealthSub-saharan AfricaFood PolicyCommunity SustainabilityParasitologyFall Armyworm InvasionPathogen PrevalenceFood SecurityMedicineGlobal Health CrisisVirologyDisease EmergenceAgricultureEpidemiologyEmerging Infectious DiseasesGlobal HealthEmergent VirusFarming SystemsFall ArmywormAgri-food SystemsBiosecurity
Drawing on a synthesis of the recent empirical literature, we show that since its first report in 2016, fall armyworm has continued to spread rapidly posing severe threats to the food security of smallholders in Sub-Saharan Africa. Fall armyworm impacts have been more pronounced during 2020 due to Coronavirus Disease-2019 (COVID-19) restrictions that hampered labor availability and smallholder access to crop protection inputs. The agricultural system's vulnerability to COVID-19 underscores the need for a recovery effort that focuses on building back better for smallholder communities to overcome the impacts of the pandemic, and build resilience against similar threats in the future. Institutional strengthening, linkages to input and output markets, and microcredit support will address immediate production challenges in the wake of COVID-19. Enhancing the technical capacities of smallholders and regional collaboration for multirisk monitoring and early warning will inform coordinated actions for the sustainable management of fall armyworm and other emerging risks.
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