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The Transatlantic Locust Plague

Millions of African locusts flew 5,000 kilometres to the Caribbean in 1988. They are thought to have come over with Hurricane Joan in a journey experts had thought impossible.

A plague of African desert locusts flew 5,000 kilometres non-stop to the Caribbean in 1988 in a journey never before recorded. They are thought to have come over with Hurricane Joan and the islanders were horrified at the sight of millions of dead and dying locusts on the beaches. Ministries of Agriculture feared the insects would become an established pest and would ruin crops but the surviving locusts seemed disorientated and soon died out. Claire Bowes has been speaking to an entomologist from St Lucia about the strange visitors who didn't like bananas.

Photo: Getty Creative Images

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9 minutes

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Mon 18 Sep 2017 07:50GMT

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  • Mon 18 Sep 2017 07:50GMT

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