Mail & Guardian

Tiny weevil may be the lesser of Lake Ossa’s alien evils

- Daniel Ekonde in Lake Ossa

Jonathan Ndjana, a lean man in his early forties, works among a group of fishermen and women who have gathered on the banks of Lake Ossa to clear the lake’s entry point of weeds.

“This plant you see has covered the area,” he tells the Mail & Guardian, stretching his hand to point out to the broad swathe of salvinia fern on the lake. “It’s not easy to fish here anymore.”

Ndjana is one of around 400 people who fish on Cameroon’s Lake Ossa, a wildlife reserve area that is home to a wide range of aquatic life — not just fish, but West African manatees, dwarf crocodiles and soft shell turtles.

The lake has come under threat, however, from a giant, floating fern that originates in Brazil and Argentina.

Bounded by the country’s longest river, the Sanaga, the 4000-hectare lake has experience­d a significan­t growth of the invasive plant, which now covers 40% of the lake’s surface.

“We do this exercise to at least clear this point of embarking, so that we can access the areas that are not affected,” Ndjana explains.

But the effort is almost futile: “We weed out tonnes of the salvinia plant regularly, but within days it will be as if we did not do any work here.”

Ndjana, who has fished on the lake for 22 years, admits the salvinia invasion is an even bigger issue than the rising water levels the fishers now face regularly.

It is a problem shared by all the fishers in the Dizangué community,

which comprises about 2000 people. Fishing and subsistenc­e farming are their main economic activities.

Martin Betote, 52, has fished here for nearly two decades. He says the salvinia has also attacked his earnings.

“My income is much lower now. A fisherman used to get about 100 000 francs [$200] – but now even to send our children to school is difficult,” Betote tells the M&G.

He has joined a community-led stokvel, through which he and his

colleagues collect their savings and put together loans.

“At the moment, we are preparing 500 000 francs [$900] to help two of our members,” he says.

One solution to the salvinia invasion may lie in nature itself, though just as alien as the salvinia itself.

Aristide Takoukam Kamla is a marine biologist who has been working in the reserve area since 2014.

Through his African Marine Mammal Conservati­on Organisati­on, the 36-year-old is rearing about 5 000

Cyrtobagou­s salviniae, a species of weevil — and is planning to introduce them in the lake as a biological weapon against the canopy plant.

“These weevils are very powerful in fighting against the salvinia plant, which is very terrible to this environmen­t,” he tells the M&G.

“The way it works is that it will destroy the plant at two stages: the larvae will feed on the buds [of salvinia] where new leaves of the plant grow and where nitrogen, the food of the plant, is concentrat­ed; while the adults will feed on the leaves, causing the whole plant to collapse,” Kamla explains.

South Africa, Senegal and Mauritania have all employed the use of weevils for similar purposes over the past few decades .

Kamla says the weevils were supplied by the University of Louisiana, where researcher­s have done comprehens­ive studies. The biological control method is safe for the lake, he says.

“The weevils only feed on the salvinia plant — they die when they don’t feed on the plant.”

But Kamla still needs the go-ahead from Cameroon’s government before introducin­g the weevils into the lake.

Until then, Ndjana will continue joining other fishermen in the backbreaki­ng exercise of weeding out the stubborn plant by hand.

“We can deal with high-water levels caused by the river Sanaga but the salvinia invasion doesn’t help our fishing at all,” he laments.

 ?? Photo: ammco.org ?? Throttling: The invasive salvinia fern is growing rampant on Cameroon’s Lake Ossa, and fishing communitie­s who try to prune it back by hand say it grows back too fast to control.
Photo: ammco.org Throttling: The invasive salvinia fern is growing rampant on Cameroon’s Lake Ossa, and fishing communitie­s who try to prune it back by hand say it grows back too fast to control.

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