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I saw this story today, it seems like they are definitely a threat to poor farmers. I can't believe the widespread use of toxic chemicals is the answer.
For thousands of years, subsistence farmers in sub-Saharan Africa have been at the mercy of the voracious Red-billed Quelea bird; sky-blackening flocks of the tiny “feathered locust” still decimate fields across the continent. "Its main characteristic is that it occurs in extremely big...
www.thenewhumanitarian.org
The second link says they have few natural predators, which is normally nature's way of keeping boom-bust cycles from getting out of hand.
There are up to 1.5 billion Red-billed Queleas after the breeding season from what I've found. If they kill millions, millions of others will take their place--it's only perpetuating senseless violence, not to mention the toxicity of the chemicals. Surely, they can do better to find a non-violent alternative.
EDIT: Some of them are listed in the link above; my favourite is planting quelea-resistant crops.
Logical answer is to eat them. Cheap lime traps have worked effectively in Europe for centuries.
The article points out that the birds numbers have soared along with the increase in grain cultivation. so it is a man made problem calling for a man made solution.