Floods destroyed more than 400 hectares (1,000 acres) of rice in Niger's southeastern Diffa region, already beset by deadly attacks by Boko Haram jihadists, the local governor said.
Nearly 3,000 tonnes of rice worth 717 million CFA francs (more than one million euros, $1.13 million) have been lost as a result, Governor Mahamadou Bakabe said on state television late Sunday.
Grain deficits this year have already threatened food security for thousands of small farmers in Diffa, according to the government.
The UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said last month that flooding in the semi-desert country had claimed 45 lives since June.
The rains destroyed nearly 17,400 homes and killed more than 33,000 heads of livestock, it said.
The Boko Haram insurgency, launched in northeast Nigeria in 2009, spilled over into Niger in early 2015, leaving hundreds of civilians dead.
The UN says the conflict has pushed more than 300,000 refugees and internally displaced people to the Diffa region.
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New study details the genetic evolution of domesticated animals
Washington (UPI) Nov 20, 2018
How has the domestication process impacted the evolution of gene regulation among dogs, cows, pigs, rabbits and other tamed animals? That's the question researchers at the Earlham Institute are trying to answer.
Specifically, geneticists at Earlham set out to measure the abundance and distribution of miRNAs in different tissue types among domesticated animals.
MicroRNAs, or miRNAs, are small non-coding RNA molecules that regulate gene expression inside the cells of plants, animals and so ... read more