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View Full Version : Good Morning: Adding to Dust Bowl and Depression...Grasshopper Plague



Okla-homey
7/26/2010, 06:34 AM
A plague of locusts too!:eek: :(

July 26, 1931 Grasshoppers bring ruin to Midwest

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79 years ago on this day in 1931, a swarm of grasshoppers descends on crops throughout the American heartland, devastating millions of acres. Iowa, Nebraska and South Dakota, already in the midst of a bad drought, suffered tremendously from this disaster.

Since the very beginning of agriculture, people have struggled to prevent insects from eating their crops. Locusts and grasshoppers, insect cousins, are among the most feared pests.

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Iowa farm family surveys locust devastation in 1931

A plague of these insects can occur when conditions cause their populations to suddenly explode. Usually this happens under drought or very dry conditions, since their egg pods are vulnerable to fungus in wet soil. When the soil is very dry, swarms can develop.

Professor Jeff Lockwood of Wyoming describes being in a swarm as follows, “They explode from beneath your feet. There’s sort of a rolling wave that forms out it front of you. They hit up against your body and cling against your clothes. It’s almost like being immersed in a gigantic living being.” Locusts and grasshoppers undergo a significant transformation when they become part of a swarm. Their wings and jaws grow, enabling them to travel greater distances and increasing their appetite.

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Some people still kept their sense of humor about it

The July 1931 swarm was said to be so thick that it blocked out the sun and one could shovel the grasshoppers with a scoop. Cornstalks were eaten to the ground and fields left completely bare.

Since the early 1930s, swarms have not been seen in the United States. However, North Africa and parts of the Middle East continue to experience problems with insect swarms, which sometimes includes as many as 1 billion bugs.

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Wanna learn more about American grasshopper swarms? Some guy has written a book:

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OhU1
7/26/2010, 01:09 PM
It's the insects world we just live in it.

What is it about dry hot weather that makes the grasshoppers come out? I know it is truly hellishly hot when I hear the damn bugs making "chittering" like noises in the trees.

olevetonahill
7/26/2010, 01:24 PM
It's the insects world we just live in it.

What is it about dry hot weather that makes the grasshoppers come out? I know it is truly hellishly hot when I hear the damn bugs making "chittering" like noises in the trees.

This from Homeys Post
A plague of these insects can occur when conditions cause their populations to suddenly explode. Usually this happens under drought or very dry conditions, since their egg pods are vulnerable to fungus in wet soil. When the soil is very dry, swarms can develop.

OUMallen
7/26/2010, 03:49 PM
I saw a tiny swarm looking for a golf ball in the rough out at Sugar Creek this weekend.

olevetonahill
7/26/2010, 03:57 PM
I saw a tiny swarm looking for a golf ball in the rough out at Sugar Creek this weekend.

Why was Grasshoppers lookin fer a golf ball?:P