Indonesië
Wilt u reageren op dit bericht? Maak met een paar klikken een account aan of log in om door te gaan.

Indonesië

Informatie- en nieuwsforum over Indonesië en Nederlands-Indië
 
IndexLaatste afbeeldingenRegistrerenInloggen

 

 Caterpillars Invade East Java Villages

Ga naar beneden 
AuteurBericht
Kesasar

Kesasar


Aantal berichten : 2586
Registratiedatum : 03-01-09
Woonplaats : Selandia Baru

Caterpillars Invade East Java Villages Empty
BerichtOnderwerp: Caterpillars Invade East Java Villages   Caterpillars Invade East Java Villages Icon_minitimevr 1 apr 2011 - 16:43




Surabaya. East Java’s deputy governor has ordered officials to prepare for possible evacuations in areas hit by a caterpillar outbreak, a report said on Friday.

Saifullah Yusuf also requested authorities to monitor the situation in Probolinggo district, where villages were swamped by thousands of caterpillars, said Edi Purwinarti, the governor’s assistant on people’s welfare.

“So far, the condition is not that bad yet,” Edi said on Friday.

“The possibility of evacuating residents is [an option] if the conditions become worrying or dangerous,” Edi was quoted by Detiksurabaya.com as saying.

In the past two weeks, the swarm has spread to five subdistricts in Probolinggo, with the insects crawling into homes and fields, causing skin rashes among residents.

The herbivorous insects have also destroyed more than 8,800 mango trees — the district’s main agricultural product.

Saifullah said residents would only be evacuated after teams sent to the affected areas reported that it was necessary to do so.

The teams were also tasked to exterminate the caterpillars, believed to have come from the forests around Mount Bromo at the district’s border.

“The teams are at the location, conducting exterminations. We are trying to reduce the number of [insects at] affected locations,” Saifullah said. “Hopefully this can be overcome soon.”

He said the extermination teams used pesticide and disinfectants to kill off the insects.

Wibowo Eko Putro, head of East Java’s agriculture agency, said the swarm could have been caused by damage to Mount Bromo’s ecosystem after recent volcanic eruptions.

Reports said the disappearance of the insect’s natural predators could also be a culprit.

“A migration of the caterpillar population took place because the ecosystem on the slopes of Bromo has been destroyed,” Wibowo said.

The agriculture chief said, however, that his theory needed to be verified by experts.

Wibowo said the agriculture agency’s teams had also sprayed pesticide in affected villages, but they had to stop because the chemical was too expensive.

“We are now using preventive measures such as burning trash around the mango trees to reduce humidity,” Wibowo said, adding that this would slow down the insect’s growth.

Surabaya. East Java’s deputy governor has ordered officials to prepare for possible evacuations in areas hit by a caterpillar outbreak, a report said on Friday.

Saifullah Yusuf also requested authorities to monitor the situation in Probolinggo district, where villages were swamped by thousands of caterpillars, said Edi Purwinarti, the governor’s assistant on people’s welfare.

“So far, the condition is not that bad yet,” Edi said on Friday.

“The possibility of evacuating residents is [an option] if the conditions become worrying or dangerous,” Edi was quoted by Detiksurabaya.com as saying.

In the past two weeks, the swarm has spread to five subdistricts in Probolinggo, with the insects crawling into homes and fields, causing skin rashes among residents.

The herbivorous insects have also destroyed more than 8,800 mango trees — the district’s main agricultural product.

Saifullah said residents would only be evacuated after teams sent to the affected areas reported that it was necessary to do so.

The teams were also tasked to exterminate the caterpillars, believed to have come from the forests around Mount Bromo at the district’s border.

“The teams are at the location, conducting exterminations. We are trying to reduce the number of [insects at] affected locations,” Saifullah said. “Hopefully this can be overcome soon.”

He said the extermination teams used pesticide and disinfectants to kill off the insects.

Wibowo Eko Putro, head of East Java’s agriculture agency, said the swarm could have been caused by damage to Mount Bromo’s ecosystem after recent volcanic eruptions.

Reports said the disappearance of the insect’s natural predators could also be a culprit.

“A migration of the caterpillar population took place because the ecosystem on the slopes of Bromo has been destroyed,” Wibowo said.

The agriculture chief said, however, that his theory needed to be verified by experts.

Wibowo said the agriculture agency’s teams had also sprayed pesticide in affected villages, but they had to stop because the chemical was too expensive.

“We are now using preventive measures such as burning trash around the mango trees to reduce humidity,” Wibowo said, adding that this would slow down the insect’s growth.


(First it was the 'Triffids that were coming, now the caterpillars? For the people there absolutely no joke! All this x the JG)
Terug naar boven Ga naar beneden
 
Caterpillars Invade East Java Villages
Terug naar boven 
Pagina 1 van 1
 Soortgelijke onderwerpen
-
» Banks Break on Bengawan Solo, Flooding Villages in East Java
»  Thousands of Central Java villages threatened by drought
» 4 die in East Java bus crash
» Landslide Kills 10 in East Java
» Four killed in East Java landslide

Permissies van dit forum:Je mag geen reacties plaatsen in dit subforum
Indonesië :: Berichten :: News in English-
Ga naar: