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appalachiablue

(41,127 posts)
Thu Aug 13, 2020, 01:09 PM Aug 2020

Plagues of Mice: Field Rodents Destroy Crops In Heatwave, Say Germans: 120K Hectares Stripped

'Plagues of field mice decimating crops, say German farmers. Estimated 120,000 hectares stripped bare by rodents and now browning in heatwave/ The Guardian, Aug. 13, 2020. '

Large swathes of Germany’s farmland are being decimated by plagues of field mice leading to significant crop loss, according to the country’s national farming association. In some parts of the country, a quarter of the arable land is affected, leading to calls for compensation as well as a relaxation on rules governing the use of pesticides.

*Across Germany, the effects of a succession of dry summers and mild winters have enabled the mice – and increasingly voles – to thrive, leaving an estimated 120,000 hectares (300,000 acres) stripped bare by the rodents and now browning in the current heatwave.



Farmers said field mice had been tunnelling under the fields and gnawing at the roots of crops for months, with the neighbouring regions of Thuringia, Saxony Anhalt and Lower Saxony the worst hit. In the central state of Thuringia, as much as a quarter of the crops are affected, with damage estimated at around €450 (£407) for every hectare of wheat. Farmers’ representatives have estimated that two-thirds of their income will be lost as a result and many said they have had to buy in extra animal feed.

One option being considered by farmers is to leave their fields unsown for winter to try to starve the field mice, which are about 12cm long.

*Some farmers say that while the weather is partly to blame for the mice’s ability to reproduce to an extent not seen since the 1970s, the reduction in recent years in the use of rodenticides – chemicals which could keep the population of field mice under control – have helped them flourish. Julia Klöckner, the agricultural minister, has called for an emergency reappraisal of laws governing rodenticides to cope with what she has called an emergency situation. “We’ve already seen huge damage, and more is to be expected,” she said.

But environmentalists say that endangered species, such as hamsters, hares, birch mice and migratory birds, risk being killed off as a result. Some animal welfare groups are calling instead, for a ban on fox hunting because the animals, which each consume between 3,000 and 5,000 mice a year, could help control the population. “Hobby” hunters kill an estimated 400,000 foxes in Germany every year...

Read More. https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/aug/13/plagues-of-field-mice-decimating-crops-say-german-farmers

Mouse Plagues In Australia,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouse_plagues_in_Australia#:~:text=Mouse%20plagues%20occur%20in%20southern,New%20South%20Wales%20in%201871.

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Plagues of Mice: Field Rodents Destroy Crops In Heatwave, Say Germans: 120K Hectares Stripped (Original Post) appalachiablue Aug 2020 OP
Well this very disturbing on top of all the other "plagues" hitting us. CentralMass Aug 2020 #1
Stop killing the mice preditors, like the red fox. marble falls Aug 2020 #2
Who has "plague of rodents" on their pandemic bingo card? hedda_foil Aug 2020 #3
What Americans went thru in the Midwest Dust Bowl, 1930s! appalachiablue Aug 2020 #4

appalachiablue

(41,127 posts)
4. What Americans went thru in the Midwest Dust Bowl, 1930s!
Thu Aug 13, 2020, 03:05 PM
Aug 2020


- DUST BOWL PESTS for Midwest Farmers in the 1930s.

Drought, dust storms and new pests. Lacking natural predators, Jackrabbit populations surged, same with grasshopper swarms. Spiders and centipedes infiltrated homes; static electricity...
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