Grasshopper & Mormon Cricket Reporting — Klamath Irrigation District

Klamath Irrigation District · Field Notice


Grasshopper & Mormon Cricket Reporting

Grasshoppers and Mormon crickets are active across the Basin this year. If you see them on your ground, tell us where. Your reports help the District and partner agencies map where the insects are building and respond before they reach standing crops.

Report a sighting
Active conditions

Grasshoppers have been observed hatching in large numbers at the Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge, and producers along the state line are already treating. Early reports make the difference.

01What we're seeing

  • Grasshoppers have been spotted hatching and pouring out of the ground at the Lower Klamath National Wildlife Refuge in Siskiyou County.
  • Producers along the Oregon–California state line have treated for grasshopper infestations several times this spring.
  • KID patrons are reporting every stage — from newly hatched nymphs to full-grown adults — in the Van Brimmer Ditch Company area and the dry ground along the state line.
~50,000
acres of dry or fallowed land in 2026 — prime grasshopper breeding habitat
All stages
nymph through adult observed in the field right now
Repeated
treatments already underway on the Oregon side of the line

02The damage they do

During the 2023 grasshopper invasion, one patron reported losing 80 acres of grain in a single day.

Patron report · 2023 outbreak

At outbreak numbers, grasshoppers and Mormon crickets feed on leaves, stems, and seed heads, and they can clear a field in a matter of days. They usually start at the edges and work inward, and once one field is gone they move on to the next. Grain, alfalfa, and pasture are all at risk — and even where they don't take out a stand completely, they cut both yield and quality. 2023 was the last major outbreak in the Basin, and with this year's dry, fallowed ground and scarce forage, the conditions point the same direction.

03Why your report matters

Grasshopper outbreaks tend to follow drought years. Low rainfall and warm spring weather help eggs hatch and let young nymphs survive, so populations build fast — and as forage dries up, hungry grasshoppers move into pastures and crops. With so much dry, fallowed ground this season, conditions across the Basin point toward another hard year for crop damage.

The more we know about where the insects are and how thick they're getting, the better the District and partner agencies can target a response. A two-minute report from your field is the most useful information there is.

04Where we're collecting reports

Klamath County Oregon
Modoc County California
Siskiyou County California

05How to report

Fill out the short form below. It works on a phone in the field or on a computer, and it takes only a couple of minutes.

Form not loading on your device? Open the report form in a new tab →

06What to include in your report

  • Where you saw them — nearest road, field, or canal.
  • Roughly how many — a few, or thick across the ground.
  • Life stage — tiny nymphs, mid-size, or full-grown adults.
  • What they're on — bare ground, pasture, or a standing crop.
  • Whether you've treated, and what you used.
  • A photo, if you can take one.

07Resources

Klamath Irrigation District · klamathid.org
Questions about reporting? Contact the District office.