Food security, locusts and Covid -19
Efforts to irradiate locust swarms and save harvests continue despite the pandemic.
Despite the Covid-19 pandemic efforts to counter massive swarms of locusts across East Africa have continued. In many places this has been very effective, killing up to 90% of locusts. However, the threat of repeated waves of locusts remains says Cyril Ferrand, who leads the UN Food and Agriculture Organisation's Resilience Team in East Africa.
Conversely West Africa is unaffected by locusts and with a block on imports local producers have seen demand grow for their produce, an unusual positive effect from the pandemic according to Sandrine Dury from the French agricultural research agency CIRAD.
We examine the potential for a second wave of coronavirus as many countries relax lockdown measures, businesses reopen and mass protests take to the streets. Epidemiologist Carl Bergstrom is interested in working out which of these movements is likely to have the most impact.
And from South Africa, how radio telescope engineers there have turned their hands to developing new ventilators appropriate for regional needs.
And we were bowled over by a question from one CrowdScience listener in Australia wants to know how likely it is that the atoms in his body have been used in someone else鈥檚 body? We all like to think we are unique; no one is quite like us. But is that really true?
Presenter Marnie Chesterton tackles Moshe鈥檚 question with help from every area of science. From geologists helping us work out how many atoms are on the Earth鈥檚 surface to biologists helping us work out how many atoms each body uses. Perhaps we are much less special than we think.
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- Sun 14 Jun 2020 14:06GMT大象传媒 World Service Americas and the Caribbean
- Sun 14 Jun 2020 15:06GMT大象传媒 World Service News Internet
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Unexpected Elements
The news you know, the science you don't