Invasive forest pests cause 56 billion yuan (US$7 billion) of
economic losses to China each year, a Chinese forestry official has
said.
In recent years forest pests have been gnawing more and more
trees in China, damaging 140 million mu (9.3 million hectares) of
forest, said Wei Diansheng, director of the Tree Planting and
Forestation Department with the State Forestry Administration
(SFA).
Each year, forest pests cause 88 billion yuan (US$11 billion) of
economic losses to China. 63 percent of the damage is caused by
foreign species, he told a forum held in Urumqi, capital of
northwest China's Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region, on
Wednesday.
"China suffers more than any other country from forest pests. It
faces a huge challenge in keeping foreign pests out," he said.
In 1980, China reported only 10 invasive species of foreign
origin. The figure has now risen to 26. They have been detected in
more than 4,000 counties in the country's 28 provinces, autonomous
regions and municipalities and have affected more than 42 million
mu (2.8 million hectares) of forest, according to SFA
statistics.
China is the world's third largest country and one of the
richest in terms of biodiversity. A wide range of habitats and
environmental conditions make China especially vulnerable to the
establishment of alien invasive species, experts have said.
China invested 380 million yuan (US$47.5 million) last year
fighting alien forest pests and the figure is expected to reach 400
million yuan (US$50 million) this year, Wei said.
Beijing has been cooperating since April with neighboring
Tianjin Municipality and Hebei Province in an initiative to wipe
out destructive forest pests, including the American white
moth.
Forestry authorities said they would hire planes to fly more
than 1,000 sorties to spray pesticide over roadside green belts and
key green projects covering an area of more than 667,000
hectares.
The project is expected to last until the end of September, the
Beijing Forestry Bureau has said.
According to the bureau, six provinces and municipalities in
northern China - Beijing, Tianjin, Hebei, Liaoning, Shandong and
Shaanxi - are experiencing problems with the moth.
The invasive American White Moth, or Hyphantria cunea, a harmful
forest migrant from North America which was first detected in
northeastern Liaoning Province in 1979, is threatening plants and
crops in six provinces and municipalities in China. Beijing and its
neighbors have suffered most from the White Moth, according to the
SFA.
(Xinhua News Agency August 18, 2006)