Monday, November 7, 2011

Central Africa: Invasive Species Wrecking Eco-stability

Central Africa: Invasive Species Wrecking Eco-stability
Ntaryike Divine Jr
Douala, Cameroon
29 September 2011

The protracting nonexistence of a synchronized crossborder regime to monitor and control the entry and proliferation of invasive alien species or IAS in Central Africa could cost the region untold and multiform havoc in the near future, a study has warned.

The conclusion is hinged on an investigation of routes through which rodents have entered and settled in the DR Congo.  Prince Kiswele Kaleme, a Congolese biodiversity conservationist and PhD final-year student at South Africa’s Stellenbosch University led the probe funded by the Belgian Technical Cooperation.  It comprised South African, US and French researchers.

“The aim of the study was to highlight the fact that alien species are entering the DRC and in fact, all countries in the Central-East Africa region on a regular basis. Although not all of these species necessarily become invasive, the potential certainly exists for some of them to spread and negatively impact local biodiversity, food security, disrupt ecosystems and affect human health,” Kaleme explained in an email-conducted interview.

According to him, there is a dire need for the elaboration of an all-embracing regional policy blueprint to conserve the environment and curb the escalating IAS onslaught in the region.

“Ideally what is needed is a unified strategy to deal with invasive species. Such a strategy should have the buy-in of all the role players to ensure that it is successfully implemented. Whatever the efficiency of the government services, if the role players do not abide, things cannot work. The collaboration of every one including researchers, tourists, trade and industry officials, etc., is needed,” Kaleme added.

IAS are usually introduced into an area from other parts of the world either by accident or voluntarily.  Though not all alien species become invasive, they may end up colonizing and invading their new habitat. They have the potential to displace indigenous species in their quest for survival by outrunning them in the quest for wellbeing.  Researchers say they perturb biodiversity, wreck ecosystems, alter habitats and threaten humans by spreading diseases, decimating water and land resources among others.

Researchers agree that threats posed by IAS are set to soar with increasing globalization and human mobility and interaction for diverse purposes including trade, travel and tourism.  Natural barriers like oceans, mountains, rivers and deserts are crumbling implying that indigenous species are losing their natural isolation. 

“Take the case of the water hyacinth for example.  We didn’t have it in Cameroon a few years ago.  All we know is that it was imported into Africa from the Amazon in Latin America.  You see how it is invading the River Wouri estuary around Douala?  Fishermen are complaining of poor catch because water surfaces are decreasing sharply.  Prices for shrimps are skyrocketing because fishermen have trouble accessing them, and unfortunately, we have not been able to come with a method to eliminate it,” Prince Nasser Kemajou, a prominent Cameroonian environmentalist concurred. 

He said attempts at manually weeding out the plants over the years have all ended in futility.  He warned that Cameroon, which is home to about 90 percent of all ecosystems found across Africa, runs a real risk IAS infestation owing to underreporting and the absence of coordinated research to enable a sound scientific approach to the problem.

And Kaleme agrees.  “We need the science to inform us how to deal with the species that have already been introduced into the region, and how to ensure that other species don’t become established in future.  Proactive regulations, along with increased research into the local and alien animal and plant species found in the region must be put in place.  We need to put our research into practice to ensure that invasive species do not colonize even more areas,” he recommended. 

An existing NEPAD [New Partnership for Africa’s Development] blueprint to tackle IAS prescribes raising awareness, enforcing customs controls, building partnerships, increasing vigilance on imported plants and animal species, among others.  But critics say since its elaboration, the plan has remained dormant as governments grapple to satisfy other major priorities in agriculture and health, for example.

“At the level of Cameroon, nothing is being heard about the NEPAD project.  But there is a another one being implemented by the United Nations Environment Program in tandem with the Global Environment Facility which goes from 2011 to 2015.  It is about the development and institution of a national monitoring and control system for biological invaders.  We are hoping that upon completion, we should have effective mechanisms to combat invasive species,” Kemajou stated.

Elsewhere, experts agree that preventing the introduction of IAS is the most cost-effective and environmentally-sound measure so far available against IAS whose negative impacts can be vast, insidious and usually irremediable.  Others are however suggesting that governments should turn trouble into fortune by investing in the transformation of some IAS – like making paper and fuelwood from Eucalyptus and Acacia, for instance.

Mosquito Net Distribution Drive Blotched


Mosquito Net Distribution Drive Blotched
Ntaryike Divine Jr
Douala, Cameroon
30 October 2011


On August 20 2011 amid bloated pomp, Cameroon’s PM Philemon Yang flagged off a countrywide government campaign to distribute over 8.6 million long lasting insecticidal mosquito bed nets gratis.  But the operation that was initially slated to span a dozen days from 8 to 20 September is yet to takeoff in six of the country’s ten administrative regions.


And even where distribution has been declared complete, many enrolled beneficiaries are still without the treated nets.  “Here is my voucher which entitles me to a net.  But the distribution agents tell me they have run out of supplies,” Jacques Ndoum, a Yaoundé resident complained in late October.  Across the country, other omitted recipients are grumbling and threatening protests.


Cynics originally raised eyebrows over the timetabling of the venture.  They insinuated it was a tacit vote-canvassing gambit for 29-year-serving President Paul Biya, who sought and won reelection last 9 October.  “There can be no election gift better than that which takes care of the health of the population. The head of state has instructed that every family head in the country receives at least one bed net,” Health Minister Andre Mama Fouda declared at the campaign launch.


Sustained criticism over heavy politicization of the initiative purportedly motivated the Global Fund to demand its suspension until after the election.  The fund is financing the project, alongside the Cameroon government to the tune of over 34 billion FCFA [about US$68 million]. Yet despite the lag, abundant flaws rued at various levels of the drive stayed unfixed.


Data garnered from a nationwide headcount of beneficiaries preceding distribution showed gross mismatches with field realities.  In the West Region for example, headcount statistics indicated over 1.8 million inhabitants with about 890.000 shortlisted beneficiaries.  But the region was eventually allocated only 640.000 nets.


“On paper, the technicians presumed it would be easy, but the realities on the field have shown it’s a complex operation.  The first complexity is transportation.  We had planned to distribute before the start of the rainy season, but the rains caught up with us and in several areas, it was impossible to distribute,” Minister Fouda acknowledged on state radio. 


He also named reliance on now-evolved 2008 census statistics, and the omission of several households as other pitfalls.  Elsewhere, various civil society associations coopted to assist dropped out upon discovering they would not be remunerated, while some headcount and distribution agents were simply chased away by suspicious family heads. 


Meantime, residents of the country’s largest city Douala are still waiting for distribution to commence. “We are waiting for the minister to give the go-ahead for distribution to begin.  Over 1.2 million bed nets are due distribution in the Littoral Region,” regional public health delegate, Andre Bita Fouda announced late October.


Across the malaria-endemic city, some anxious voucher-holders are heaping accusations on local health officials.  “They have derailed the nets and soon you will find them on shelves at pharmacies and markets where they will sell like hot cake because we hear they have been designed to last longer,” Melanie Talom, a housewife and mother of two charged.


Mama Fouda has issued a release reiterating the nets are not for sale.  He has urged the population to denounce anyone vending or hoarding the nets.  He says the Global Fund will undertake an audit of the process when it is completed nationwide, and culprits will be harshly punished.


Nonetheless, the 2011 treated bed nets distribution campaign is the country’s hugest.  Between 2003 and 2009, only 2, 4 million nets were shared out to pregnant women and for kids under five years old.  The long lasting insecticidal nets are impregnated with a substance that kills mosquitoes when they come in contact with it.


‘Such mass distributions have enabled considerable reduction of malaria-related deaths in other African countries and the impact should also be positive for Cameroon. Treated nets can curb deaths by between 20 to 25 percent and have proven to be the most effective method of preventing transmission of the malaria parasite by the female anopheles mosquito which bites mostly at night,” Dr Leopold Gustave Lehman, parasitology researcher at the University of Douala explained.


Latest figures from the Ministry of Public Health show a malaria-related mortality rate of 43 percent,
Implying the disease snuffs out more lives than AIDS and TB put together.  40 percent of consultations in health structures are still blamed on malaria, which causes an annual GDP loss of 1.3 percent. 


The ongoing campaign is intended to scale up the usage of nets in Cameroon from 13 to 80 percent among high risk populations and help the country attain Millennium Development Goals 3, 4 and 5 by 2015. 


However, there are looming fears the nets may again end up as window blinds, material for wedding gowns or serve as fishing nets.  Elsewhere across the country, some complain that sleeping under the nets gives the spooky impression they’re lying in coffins, while others say their tight meshing hinders the smooth flow of air.