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Giant snails and tiny insects threaten the South's rice and crawfish farms

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Giant snails and tiny insects threaten the South's rice and crawfish farms
News

News

Giant snails and tiny insects threaten the South's rice and crawfish farms

2026-02-06 15:11 Last Updated At:16:50

KAPLAN, La. (AP) — Josh Courville has harvested crawfish his whole life, but these days, he's finding a less welcome catch in some of the fields he manages in southern Louisiana.

Snails. Big ones.

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Apple snails sit in tanks as part of an experiment testing concentrations of copper sulfate used to kill the snails Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Apple snails sit in tanks as part of an experiment testing concentrations of copper sulfate used to kill the snails Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Rice delphacid specimens, invasive insects, sit under a microscope Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a laboratory in Rayne, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Rice delphacid specimens, invasive insects, sit under a microscope Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a laboratory in Rayne, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Tyler Musgrove, a rice extension specialist with Louisiana State University, uses a net to catch insects in a rice field Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Tyler Musgrove, a rice extension specialist with Louisiana State University, uses a net to catch insects in a rice field Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Water fills crawfish ponds, back, next to rice fields Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Water fills crawfish ponds, back, next to rice fields Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Cecilia Gallegos tosses out used bait while harvesting crawfish Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Cecilia Gallegos tosses out used bait while harvesting crawfish Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Birds fly overhead as a crawfish boat moves through a pond while harvesting Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Birds fly overhead as a crawfish boat moves through a pond while harvesting Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

An apple snail sits in a drainage ditch Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, near a crawfish pond in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

An apple snail sits in a drainage ditch Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, near a crawfish pond in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

A cluster of apple snail eggs, with some that have hatched, sticks to a plant Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

A cluster of apple snail eggs, with some that have hatched, sticks to a plant Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Blake Wilson, an entomologist at Louisiana State University walks into a crawfish pond while looking for apple snails Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Blake Wilson, an entomologist at Louisiana State University walks into a crawfish pond while looking for apple snails Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Blake Wilson, an entomologist at Louisiana State University, inspects a baby apple snail Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, at a crawfish farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Blake Wilson, an entomologist at Louisiana State University, inspects a baby apple snail Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, at a crawfish farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Apple snail eggs stick to a plant Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Apple snail eggs stick to a plant Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

A crawfish crawls through apple snails after harvest Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

A crawfish crawls through apple snails after harvest Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Josh Courville replaces a crawfish trap while harvesting Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Josh Courville replaces a crawfish trap while harvesting Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

For every crawfish Courville dumps out of a trap, three or four snails clang onto the boat’s metal sorting table. About the size of a baseball when fully grown, apple snails stubbornly survive all kinds of weather in fields, pipes and drainage ditches and can lay thousands of bubblegum-colored eggs every month.

“It’s very disheartening," Courville said. “The most discouraging part, actually, is not having much control over it.”

Apple snails are just one example of how invasive species can quickly become a nightmare for farmers.

In Louisiana, where rice and crawfish are often grown together in the same fields, there's now a second threat: tiny insects called delphacids that can deal catastrophic damage to rice plants. Much about these snails and insects is still a mystery, and researchers are trying to learn more about what's fueling their spread, from farming methods and pesticides to global shipping and extreme weather.

Experts aren’t sure what role climate change may play, but they say a warming world generally makes it easier for pests to spread to other parts of the country if they gain a foothold in the temperate South.

“We are going to have more bugs that are happier to live here if it stays warmer here longer,” said Hannah Burrack, professor and chair of the entomology department at Michigan State University.

It’s an urgent problem because in a tough market for rice, farmers who rotate the rice and crawfish crops together need successful harvests of both to make ends meet. And losses to pests could mean higher rice prices for U.S. consumers, said Steve Linscombe, director of The Rice Foundation, which does research and education outreach for the U.S. rice industry.

Courville manages fields for Christian Richard, a sixth-generation rice farmer in Louisiana. Both started noticing apple snails after a bad flood in 2016. Then the population ballooned.

In spring, at rice planting time, the hungry snails found a feast.

“It was like this science fiction movie,” Richard said, describing how each snail made its own little whirlpool as it popped out of the wet ground. “They would start on those tender rice plants, and they destroyed a 100-acre field.”

Louisiana State University scientists estimate that about 78 square miles (202 square kilometers) in the state are now regularly seeing snails.

To keep the rice from becoming a snail buffet, Richard's team and many other rice and crawfish farmers dealing with the pests start with a dry field to give the rice plants the chance to grow a few inches and get stronger, then flood the field after.

It's a planting method they'd already used on some fields, even before the snails arrived. But now, with the snails, that's essentially their only option, and it's the most expensive one.

They also can't get rid of the snails entirely. Many of the pesticides that might work on snails can also hurt crustaceans. People directly eat both rice and crawfish, unlike crops grown for animal feed, so there are fewer chemicals farmers can use on them. One option some farmers are testing, copper sulfate, can easily add thousands of dollars to an operation's costs, Courville said.

It all means "lower production, decreased revenue from that, and increased cost with the extra labor,” Richard said.

Cecilia Gallegos, who has worked as a crawfish harvester for the past three years, said the snails have made her job more difficult in the past year.

“You give up more time," she said of having to separate the crawfish from the snails, or occasionally plucking them out of sacks if they roll in by mistake. Work that already stretched as late as 3 a.m. in the busy springtime season can now take even longer.

The snails separated from the crawfish get destroyed later.

To look for pests much smaller than the apple snails, entomologists whip around heavy-duty butterfly nets and deploy Ghostbusters-style specimen-collecting vacuums. Since last year, they've been sampling for rice delphacids, tiny insects that pierce the rice plants, suck out their sap and transmit a rice virus that worsens the damage.

It's worrying for Louisiana because they've seen how bad it can get next door in Texas, where delphacids surged last year. Yields dropped by up to 50% in what's called the ratoon crop, the second rice crop of the year, said The Rice Foundation's Linscombe. Texas farmers are projected to grow rice on only half the acres they did last year, and some are worried they won't be able to get bank loans, said Tyler Musgrove, a rice extension specialist at the Louisiana State University AgCenter.

Musgrove said entomologists believe almost all rice fields in Louisiana had delphacids by September and October of last year. By then, most of the rice had already been harvested, so they're waiting to see what happens this year.

“The rice delphacid this past year was probably one of the most significant entomological events to occur in U.S. rice since the ‘50s when it first appeared,” Musgrove said. Delphacids had eventually disappeared after that outbreak until now. It's been identified in four of the six rice-producing states — Texas, Louisiana, Arkansas and Mississippi — but it's not clear yet whether it's made a permanent winter home in the U.S.

Scientists are still in the early stages of advising farmers on what to do about the resurgence of the destructive bugs without adding costly or crawfish-harming pesticides. And they're also starting to study whether rice and crawfish grown together will see different impacts than rice grown by itself.

“I think everyone agrees, it’s not going to be a silver bullet approach. Like, oh, we can just breed for it or we could just spray our way out of it,” said Adam Famoso, director of Louisiana State University's Rice Research Station.

Burrack, of Michigan State, said that climate change is making it harder for modeling that has helped predict how big populations of invasive pests will get and when they may affect certain crops. And that makes it harder for farmers to plan around them.

“From an agricultural standpoint, that’s generally what happens when you get one of these intractable pests,” Burrack said. “People are no longer able to produce the thing that they want to produce in the place that they’re producing it.”

Follow Melina Walling on X @MelinaWalling and Bluesky @melinawalling.bsky.social. Follow Joshua A. Bickel on Instagram, Bluesky and X @joshuabickel.

The Associated Press’ climate and environmental coverage receives financial support from multiple private foundations. AP is solely responsible for all content. Find AP’s standards for working with philanthropies, a list of supporters and funded coverage areas at AP.org.

Apple snails sit in tanks as part of an experiment testing concentrations of copper sulfate used to kill the snails Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Apple snails sit in tanks as part of an experiment testing concentrations of copper sulfate used to kill the snails Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Rice delphacid specimens, invasive insects, sit under a microscope Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a laboratory in Rayne, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Rice delphacid specimens, invasive insects, sit under a microscope Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a laboratory in Rayne, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Tyler Musgrove, a rice extension specialist with Louisiana State University, uses a net to catch insects in a rice field Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Tyler Musgrove, a rice extension specialist with Louisiana State University, uses a net to catch insects in a rice field Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Water fills crawfish ponds, back, next to rice fields Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Water fills crawfish ponds, back, next to rice fields Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Cecilia Gallegos tosses out used bait while harvesting crawfish Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Cecilia Gallegos tosses out used bait while harvesting crawfish Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Birds fly overhead as a crawfish boat moves through a pond while harvesting Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Birds fly overhead as a crawfish boat moves through a pond while harvesting Thursday, Jan. 22, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

An apple snail sits in a drainage ditch Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, near a crawfish pond in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

An apple snail sits in a drainage ditch Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, near a crawfish pond in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

A cluster of apple snail eggs, with some that have hatched, sticks to a plant Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

A cluster of apple snail eggs, with some that have hatched, sticks to a plant Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Blake Wilson, an entomologist at Louisiana State University walks into a crawfish pond while looking for apple snails Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Blake Wilson, an entomologist at Louisiana State University walks into a crawfish pond while looking for apple snails Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Blake Wilson, an entomologist at Louisiana State University, inspects a baby apple snail Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, at a crawfish farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Blake Wilson, an entomologist at Louisiana State University, inspects a baby apple snail Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, at a crawfish farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Apple snail eggs stick to a plant Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Apple snail eggs stick to a plant Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

A crawfish crawls through apple snails after harvest Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

A crawfish crawls through apple snails after harvest Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, at a farm in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Josh Courville replaces a crawfish trap while harvesting Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

Josh Courville replaces a crawfish trap while harvesting Wednesday, Jan. 21, 2026, in Kaplan, La. (AP Photo/Joshua A. Bickel)

CHENNAI, India (AP) — Opening batters Priyansh Arya and Prabhsimran Singh gave Punjab Kings a flying start to a target of 210 as they overhauled Chennai Super Kings in the Indian Premier League on Friday.

Impact substitute Arya set the tone with 39 runs off 11 balls as he and Singh rumbled to 68-1 in the powerplay. Captain Shreyas Iyer's 26-ball half-century and Cooper Connolly's 36 ensured Punjab reached 210-5 with eight balls to spare and won by five wickets.

Chennai thought it put up a defendable total of 209-5 at home thanks to former India Under-19 captain Ayush Mhatre's 73 off 43, Shivam Dube's unbeaten 45 off 27 and Sarfaraz Khan's cameo 32 off 12.

But Chennai's bowling was ordinary. Only five bowlers were used while allrounders Dube and debutant Prashant Veer were not used.

“That was an exceptional start for us,” Iyer said. “I feel the way they (Arya and Singh) have been batting has been phenomenal and it stabilizes the rhythm for us. I am glad everyone is getting to bat. It gives immense confidence to the team.”

Arya smacked fast bowler Matt Henry for three fours and a six in a 20-run second over after the left-hander hit Khaleel Ahmed for a four and a six off the first two legitimate balls in the first over.

Singh raised Punjab’s 50 in only the third over when he took three boundaries off Anshul Kamboj.

Henry rattled Arya's off stump and Singh was run out in a mixup with Connolly when the Australian refused to go for a tight second run. Connolly holed out at long-on then Iyer took charge of the chase.

Iyer smashed three sixes and four boundaries in a 59-run stand with Nehal Wadhera that sealed the result.

Earlier, Iyer continued the template of teams preferring to chase when he won the toss and elected to field. Sanju Samson, returning to his home venue, perished in the second over for just 7.

Mhatre showed plenty of aggression in a stand of 96 with captain Ruturaj Gaikwad, who made a scratchy 28 before falling to IPL leading wicket-taker Yuzvendra Chahal in the 12th over.

Mhatre looked set for a big knock after crashing five sixes and six boundaries and was livid with himself when he was caught at short third while attempting an extravagant shot against Vijakumar Vyshak (2-38).

Khan and Dube propelled Chennai beyond 200 but their bowlers couldn't tie down Punjab.

“We felt ... having two wrist-spinners bowling in tandem will help but off-day for both of them and that is what cost us,” Gaikwad said.

AP cricket: https://apnews.com/hub/cricket

Punjab Kings' Vijaykumar Vyshak celebrates the wicket of Chennai Super Kings' Ayush Mhatre, right, with teammates during the Indian Premier League cricket match between Chennai Super Kings and Punjab Kings in Chennai, India, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

Punjab Kings' Vijaykumar Vyshak celebrates the wicket of Chennai Super Kings' Ayush Mhatre, right, with teammates during the Indian Premier League cricket match between Chennai Super Kings and Punjab Kings in Chennai, India, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

Chennai Super Kings' Ayush Mhatre plays a shot during the Indian Premier League cricket match between Chennai Super Kings and Punjab Kings in Chennai, India, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

Chennai Super Kings' Ayush Mhatre plays a shot during the Indian Premier League cricket match between Chennai Super Kings and Punjab Kings in Chennai, India, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

Punjab Kings' Cooper Connolly plays a shot during the Indian Premier League cricket match between Chennai Super Kings and Punjab Kings in Chennai, India, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

Punjab Kings' Cooper Connolly plays a shot during the Indian Premier League cricket match between Chennai Super Kings and Punjab Kings in Chennai, India, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

Punjab Kings' captain Shreyas Iyer during the Indian Premier League cricket match between Chennai Super Kings and Punjab Kings in Chennai, India, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

Punjab Kings' captain Shreyas Iyer during the Indian Premier League cricket match between Chennai Super Kings and Punjab Kings in Chennai, India, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

Punjab Kings' Priyansh Arya bowled out by Chennai Super Kings' Matt Henry during the Indian Premier League cricket match between Chennai Super Kings and Punjab Kings in Chennai, India, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

Punjab Kings' Priyansh Arya bowled out by Chennai Super Kings' Matt Henry during the Indian Premier League cricket match between Chennai Super Kings and Punjab Kings in Chennai, India, Friday, April 3, 2026. (AP Photo/Aijaz Rahi)

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