Kuwait Times

Germany’s trees face ‘catastroph­e’ as bugs attack

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Germany’s forests have long been treasured by its people, so the country has reacted with alarm and dismay as a beetle infestatio­n has turned climatestr­essed woodlands into brown ecological graveyards. After two unusually hot summers in a row, vast patches of the forests mythologiz­ed by medieval fairytales, Goethe’s writings and Romantic painters have turned into tinderdry dead zones. Given the scale of the threat to the one third of German territory covered by trees, Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government convened a “national forest summit” yesterday.

There Agricultur­e Minister Julia Kloeckner pledged Ä800 million (about $880 million) in federal and state funds over four years to restore the 180,000 hectares of forest destroyed by drought and pests as well as storms and fires - the equivalent of 250,000 football pitches. The chief culprit has been the tiny bark beetle, which has gone on a rampage as trees in water-starved habitats have lost their natural defenses.

Defoliated skeletons

In vast parts of Germany, like Welzow forest 100 km south of Berlin, once healthy trees have become defoliated skeletons, their trunks marked by tell-tale networks of tiny tunnels. “The insect eats the bark and lays eggs inside,” said forest ranger Arne Barkhausen. “The larvae then start to eat the trunk and block the nutrient pathways of the tree, which dies in about four weeks.” The die-off has been front-page news in Germany, where millions enjoy regular walks in the woods and forester Peter Wohlleben’s book “The Hidden Life of Trees” became a runaway best-seller.

The worst forest crisis since the acid rain of the 1980s has come as climate change has shot to the top of the political agenda, highlighti­ng the value of forests not just as water filters and biodiversi­ty hotspots but also as natural carbon sinks. Hectares of spruce and pine, beech and oak forest have fallen victim to the pest in Bavaria, Thuringia and other states. In Saxony, the German army was even called in this month to help overwhelme­d foresters clear dead trees in what state authoritie­s labelled an “unparallel­ed disaster”.

‘Catastroph­e of century’ Germany boasts 90 billion trees, according to the latest survey from 2012. About 1.1 million people work in forestry and related sectors, more than in the automotive industry. But experts warn that there are no easy fixes to the bark beetles’ onslaught, since the underlying cause is beyond the control of any single nation: global warming. “Beetles have always been there, they have been creating problems for 200 years,” said Peter Biedermann of Wuerzburg University’s Department of Animal Ecology and Tropical Biology.

He said the current crisis started with the severe winter storm Friederike in Jan 2018 and the prolonged droughts that followed. “Since 2018 the attacked trees have been under water stress and their roots are no longer deep enough,” explained Biedermann. The beetles meanwhile benefit from global warming because more of them survive the milder winters and they emerge earlier in the year, breeding not one or two but up to four generation­s per year. Larissa Schulz-Trieglaff of the Forest Owners Associatio­n said all this had “caused the beetle population to explode” resulting in the “catastroph­e of the century” for German forests.

End monocultur­es

Many drought-stressed trees, meanwhile, have been too weakened to produce enough of the sticky sap that traps bugs or repels them with natural insecticid­al compounds. And there are few effective ways to fight back, said Derk Ehlert, head of wildlife in the city-state of Berlin. “We have trouble coping with it, we can’t use chemicals,” he told AFP. “When the animal is already in the tree, it stays there,” he said. “We therefore try to support the natural enemies of bark beetles, especially wasps, which like to eat their eggs and larvae.” But Biedermann warned that the bigger problem was the vulnerabil­ity of Germany’s vast forestry monocultur­es. Many forests resemble tree farms where a single species, planted in neat rows, covers hundreds of hectares, most commonly spruce planted since the lean post-war years. Environmen­t Minister Svenja Schulze said the new funds should not be used to plant even more heat-susceptibl­e spruce forests, but rather more resilient and neutral mixed woodlands.

 ??  ?? In this photo taken on July 25, 2019, an aerial view shows logs and spruce trees in a forest suffering from drought stress in Hoexter, western Germany.
In this photo taken on July 25, 2019, an aerial view shows logs and spruce trees in a forest suffering from drought stress in Hoexter, western Germany.
 ?? — AFP photos ?? European spruce bark beetles (ips typographu­s) dig into a spruce tree under water stress.
— AFP photos European spruce bark beetles (ips typographu­s) dig into a spruce tree under water stress.

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