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Alien water weed re-invades Lake Victoria Rhett A. Butler, mongabay.com February 27, 2007
The species, which is originally from South America but today is a costly invasive species worldwide, first established itself in Lake Victoria, Africa's largest lake, in 1989. By 1998 the aquatic plant, which NASA says is "among the world’s most noxious invasive weeds", covered an estimated 20,000 hectares (about 77 square miles) of Winam Gulf, in the northeast corner of Lake Victoria in Kenya. Aggressive efforts to fight the plant -- which included manual removal and the introduction of the plant's natural predator, the Neochitina weevil -- combined with favorable environmental conditions helped reduce the plant's coverage to about 500 hectares (2 square miles) by 2000, according to NASA. The space agency reports that water hyacinth density remained low until unusually heavy rains in November and December 2006 caused flooding that carried agricultural run-off and nutrient-rich sediment into the lake. NASA has since observed a water hyacinth explosion: its satellite images show a significant "greening" in a section of the lake in Kenya. Water hyacinth is a problem because it prevents fishermen from launching their boats and impedes navigation. Further, water hyacinth can clog irrigation canals and water supply pipes, while blocking sunlight from reaching other aquatic plants. NASA also notes that water hyacinth can worsen disease outbreaks by creating ideal habitat for malaria-carrying mosquitos. This article contains information from NASA. Comments? News options News index | RSS | Add to MyYahoo! Advertisements: Organic Apparel from Patagonia | Insect-repelling clothing |
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