Water hyacinth in Lake Tana |
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The incidence and depth of water hyacinth infestation in lake Tana is still at its infant stage as a result can be controlled and overcome its problem easily. But when not controlled as soon as possible, water hyacinth will cover the lake, surrounding wetlands, tributary rivers and rice farms entirely; this dramatically impacts water flow, blocks sunlight from reaching native aquatic plants, and starves the water of oxygen, often killing fish (or other life in the water). The plants also create a prime habitat for mosquitoes, the classic vectors of disease, and a species of snail known to host a parasitic flatworm which causes schistosomiasis (snail fever). Hydroelectric power, transportation and irrigation schemes will be definitely victims by the invasive weed. Generally water hyacinth remains a major problem where effective control programs are not in place. As chemical and mechanical removal is often too expensive and ineffective, researchers have turned to biological control agents to deal with water hyacinth, but this has also a limited success and time taking properties there has to be exhausted studies on ecosystem interactions prior to the introduction of weevils.
Among the short-term control measures there are physical (mechanical and manual) removal and chemical control. All have serious constraints for implementation in water bodies of developing countries of the tropical and sub-tropical regions. Mechanical removal requires the purchase of harvesters, many of them too costly for most of developing countries. Even though Manual removal requires a large labor force, and Governments of the developing world do not always have the means to pay for this operation, this would seems the best means of controlling the weed in Lake Tana.
Water hyacinth reproduces primarily by way of runners or stolons, which eventually form daughter plants. But it also produces large quantities of seeds, and these are viable up to thirty years. Therefore, long-term eradication measures have to be designed. Read the full article here
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