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The sluggard has no locusts: From persistent pest to irresistible icon
Author(s) -
Dominy Nathaniel J.,
Fannin Luke D.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
people and nature
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2575-8314
DOI - 10.1002/pan3.10198
Subject(s) - schistocerca , desert locust , locust , hyperbole , icon , history , geography , political science , ecology , biology , metaphor , linguistics , philosophy , computer science , programming language
Desert locusts Schistocerca gregaria are threatening the food security of millions of people and devastating economies in eastern Africa and northern India. The ongoing outbreak is the largest in seven decades. These events give us cause to reflect on the natural history of locusts, our fraught relationship with them, and how they are represented in American popular culture and others. Symbolic representations span millennia and most have roots in the natural life cycle of locusts—they transform, they swarm, they devastate specific food crops. There is strong tendency to exaggerate the body size of locusts and the effectiveness of control efforts. Expressions of human futility are rare except in the form of ironic humour. We conclude by suggesting that we humans indulge in hyperbole and humour to normalize and inure ourselves to the psychologically unbearable, and that this tendency is a precondition for the techno‐optimism that drives anti‐locust technologies. There is no substitute for effective monitoring and management programs, but the importance of new and emerging anti‐locust technologies is expected to increase with projections of increased cyclone activity in the northern Indian Ocean. A free Plain Language Summary can be found within the Supporting Information of this article.

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