The Jerusalem Post

Israel being invaded by foreign species of birds, mammals, plants

- • By JUDY SIEGEL-ITZKOVICH

Some enemies try to invade Israel – not only through gaps in the security fences to the east and the south – and their weapons are not guns, bombs, knives and axes.

They are invading animal and plant species and even microorgan­isms that arrive by land, air and sea, and they are trying to take over and defeat native species that are suited to living in this land.

They range from the Formosan subterrane­an termite and red fire ants to wild pigs, common myna birds and parakeets, and common water hyacinths and water lettuce.

With the growth in the human population in Israel and the speedy developmen­t that wipes out nature spots, biological variety is reduced, which influences the ecological balance and reduces its service to mankind. And it also damages the economy.

The State Comptrolle­r’s 69-page section on the authoritie­s’ action – or inaction – to deter invasive species from taking over states that “between scores and dozens of hundreds of invasive species exist in Israel, and they cause damage between NIS 473 million to NIS 1.5 billion annually.”

Wild pigs that invaded Haifa years ago – and recently arrived in Jerusalem and other parts of the country – spread garbage and even chase residents. From

June 2021 until January of this year, the Haifa Municipali­ty received 3,586 complaints about wandering wild pigs.

Comptrolle­r Matanyahu Englman examined the Environmen­tal Protection Ministry, the Nature and Parks Authority and the Agricultur­e and Rural Developmen­t Ministry, as well as the Health Ministry, the Society for the Protection of Nature and other bodies that should be involved in dealing with this challenge.

Looking at internatio­nal agreements to preserve biological variety, the comptrolle­r found that Israel does not meet 14 out of the 17 targets and that it failed to ratify several internatio­nal treaties aimed at preserving the marine environmen­t. He also discovered that Israel lacks strategic plans that exist in many other countries to protect against invading species; Israel also lacks the mandatory regulation­s for the reduction and prevention of damage resulting from the establishm­ent of invasive species that are not harmful to plants.

Harm to native species is caused not only by invaders but also by infrastruc­ture built in unsuitable places. The destructio­n of habitats and the fragmentat­ion of ecosystems that affects biodiversi­ty is caused, for example, by the constructi­on of wind turbines to generate electricit­y. The turbines are located on global bird migration routes and cause the migration path to be interrupte­d and the death of migratory birds. And the turbine’s energy transmissi­on lines may cause collision and mortality of birds.

The destructio­n of the habitat itself due to the placement of the turbine infrastruc­ture, the fencing of turbine farms and the prevention of predators entering the area, combined with the excessive deaths of the birds all cause continuous damage to native species and consequent­ly to biodiversi­ty, the comptrolle­r wrote.

The responsibi­lity for preventing harm to native species falls between the cracks of too many government and voluntary bodies, resulting in difficulti­es in collecting informatio­n and know-how and assessing risks, not to mention the taking of urgent action, the report says.

Supervisio­n at border crossings and ports is also inadequate in preventing the entrance of invading species. Red fire ants first arrived in this country 17 years ago, and by 2013, they caused an estimated NIS 1.22 billion in damage per year.

The comptrolle­r recommende­d that relevant government ministries ratify internatio­nal agreements relating to biological diversity and preventing species invasion, and prepare urgent strategic plans to deal with the growing problems. In addition, the Ministry of Environmen­tal Protection should coordinate and carry out plans and set priorities based on assessment­s and risk management. The issue should get high priority in public awareness via the media and state publicatio­ns, he said.

 ?? (Menahem Kahana/AFP via Getty Images) ?? WILD BOARS gather in a residentia­l area of Haifa.
(Menahem Kahana/AFP via Getty Images) WILD BOARS gather in a residentia­l area of Haifa.

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