Scientists have announced the success of a biological, pesticide-free method for eradicating the highly invasive water hyacinth from Africa’s waterways.
James Ogwang, an entomologist specialising in biological control at the Ugandan National Agriculture Research Organisation, and his colleagues presented their work at the annual meeting of the American Society of Plant Biologists on July 2, 2007 in Chicago, United States.
The scientists’ control strategy involves mechanical removal of the plants, and employing two natural enemies of the water hyacinth — the weed weevils Neochetina bruchi and Neochetina eichhorniae.
Using this method, the scientists successfully eradicated 90% of the water hyacinth in Africa’s Lake
Victoria. The water hyacinth plants that proliferated around Lake Victoria throughout the 1990s resulted in a decrease of the lake’s biodiversity and disrupted activities on the lake (fishermen caught less fish and the plants interfered with water transport and blocked hydroelectric power turbines, which resulted in a severe drop in the supply of electricity).
The ‘mats’ of water hyacinth are also a threat to human health: they provide a habitat for insects carrying malaria and schistosomiasis, and rotting hyacinths contaminate drinking water, causing
gastrointestinal disease. Both the adult and larval weed weevils consume the water hyacinth and, by
tunneling into the plant, allow bacteria and fungi to invade the plant. Water also enters these tunnels, sinking the mats.
Once submerged, water and wave action continue to degrade the plant matter.The control strategy resulted in reduced cases of disease, increased power generation and larger catches of fish for export.
And because pesticides were not used, the process is a cheaper and more sustainable way of removing the weeds. Amon Mwape, an environmental scientist from the Zambian Ministry of Tourism, Environment and Natural Resources says water hyacinths are invading most of Africa’s rivers, and they are a big challenge.”It is a good effort by the scientists to come up with a natural and less expensive way of controlling the weeds,” he said. But he also warned of the dangers of introducing new, non-native species into the environment, as they might damage other plant species.
Water hyacinth, Eichhornia crassipes, is one of the most invasive waterweeds in the world, and was first observed in Lake Victoria in 1989.
Condensed from a story by Michael Malakata, posted on scidev.net, 11 July 2007