Deccan Chronicle

It will cost ` 17cr to clear water hyacinth

Invasive species could kill off aquatic life in 82 lakes

- COREENA SUARES | DC

It may look pretty with its thick glossy leaves and lavender pink flowers but the water hyacinth, a free-floating perennial aquatic plant native to the Amazon basin, is a highly troublesom­e and invasive species. The web of this plant problem is spreading fast in Hyderabad where the species is growing in 82 lakes, of which 53 are larger than five acres.

This is alarming because when not controlled, water hyacinths can spread across lakes and ponds completely, affecting water flow, blocking sunlight from reaching native aquatic plants, and reducing oxygen content in the water. Over time, it can create prime habitats for mosquitoes.

GHMC is working to tackle the growth in bigger lakes, and is allocating the smaller ones to various agencies. But the neglect by civic authoritie­s and no responsibi­lity by the locals will cost the GHMC dear — the tentative cost for removal of water hyacinth in 53 lakes has been pegged at `17 crore. The average cost of carting the removed weed to the nearby quarry is `36,750 per acre and the cost of maintenanc­e for one year has been calculated at `16 crore per acre.

Dr C. Srinivasul­u, assistant professor, zoology wing, Osmania University, explained this spread of water hyacinth.

“When sewerage contaminat­ion reaches water bodies, it increases nutrient levels in the water. This encourages growth of aquatic plants. The water hyacinth is a floating aquatic microphyte that grows rapidly in sewage contaminat­ed or eutrophic lakes. It steals nutrition needed by other submerged plants and micro-organisms. The thick weed cover obstructs the penetratio­n of sunlight into the lake’s ecosystem, affecting ecological balance,” he said.

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