Oman Daily Observer

Toxic caterpilla­rs spark Dutch health scare

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THE HAGUE: Millions of tiny caterpilla­rs that shoot toxic hairs have triggered a health scare in the Netherland­s, with hundreds of people seeking medical help for symptoms including severe skin irritation and asthma attacks.

The plague has caused at least two school closures and sporting event cancellati­ons, prompting a meeting of Dutch agricultur­e officials on Wednesday to discuss how to dispose of them.

The problem has got so bad that an elderly Dutch woman in the town of Enschede attacked what she called the “rotten beasts” with a heat gun, in a video that has gone viral in the Netherland­s.

“It’s actually the first time that we’re experienci­ng a plague of such proportion­s,” Bastiaan Meerburg, director of the Dutch Pest and Wildlife Expertise Centre, said.

“In some places, the caterpilla­rs have more than tripled.”

Complaints after coming into contact with the creature’s venomous barbs, called setae, range from skin rashes and ugly blotches to shortness of breath and vomiting.

The infestatio­n has become so bad that Dutch Agricultur­e Minister Carola Schouten ordered the creation of a government website to answer questions about the pesky crawlers.

It has more than 100 frequently asked questions ranging from what to do when pets come in contact with the hairs, to why the Dutch army is not being deployed to combat the infestatio­n.

Two primary schools were temporaril­y closed near the port city of Rotterdam after pupils and teachers came into contact with the oak procession­ary caterpilla­rs.

Hockey clubs in the central town of Veenendal meanwhile called off local tournament­s due to nearby caterpilla­r nests.

The oak procession­ary caterpilla­r has always been in the Netherland­s, but especially due to climate change it has proliferat­ed and steadily made its way from the southern Limburg province to the north over the last two decades.

“The only places now not infested are the Wadden Islands, which lies off the northern Dutch coast,” said Meerburg.

More oak trees have also been planted over recent years, while experts also believe a decline in the caterpilla­rs’ natural enemies like other predatory insects may have played a role.

The plague has caused at least two school closures and sporting event cancellati­ons, prompting a meeting of Dutch agricultur­e officials on Wednesday to discuss how to dispose of them

 ??  ?? Oak procession­ary caterpilla­rs are seen in a nest on an oak tree in Zoetermeer, the Netherland­s. — AFP
Oak procession­ary caterpilla­rs are seen in a nest on an oak tree in Zoetermeer, the Netherland­s. — AFP

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