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Sub-Saharan farmers to fight Fall Armyworm with mobile phone app

Recently, the fight by sub-Saharan farmers against the Fall Armyworm, which has devastated crops and threatened food security for 300-million people, has gone digital. The United Nations (UN) has reported that the new weapon which was launched by the Food and Agriculture Organisation (FAO) and Pennsylvania State University, is a talking mobile phone app named Nuru which can identify the insect (which is, in fact, a caterpillar).

“Many African farmers might have heard about Fall Army worm but are seeing it for the first time,” FAO said in a statement. “Often they are unable to recognize it or unsure of what they are facing.”

Thanks to the Nuru app, identifying a Fall Armyworm infestation is as simple as holding a mobile phone next to a sick plant. Confirmation is immediate, FAO says, adding that the software works on a standard Android phone.



Businessdayonline.com reports that soon, in addition to English, Nuru will be able to speak Swahili, French and Twi. New languages are also to be added and these will walk the farmers through the process of checking their crops and reporting back on infestation levels before giving them advice on how to fight the pest.
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