Foreign plant species are wreaking havoc in South China city
Guangzhou and could put local flora under serious threat if
immediate steps are not taken to stop their invasion, experts have
warned.
Members of the municipal political consultative conference and
deputies to the municipal people's congress in Guangzhou have asked
the local government to pump in more funds to tackle the
menace.
A researcher with the South China Institute of Botany and leader
of Guangdong's biological resources investigation team, Peng
Shaolin, told the ongoing political consultative conference that he
had found at least five harmful alien plants in the Baiyun Mountain
alone.
The place is a favorite destination both for local and
outstation tourists.
Peng said the city had about 24 key alien species, and they were
damaging agriculture and destroying local flora.
"Our investigation shows that the invasion of harmful alien
species is on the rise in Guangzhou," Peng said.
"If the government doesn't take immediate steps to check the
spread, the consequences could be disastrous," he warned. "Alien
plants could overshadow native flora at an explosive rate, and it
wouldn't be long before they became a threat to the mountain
ecology."
More areas affected
Similar threats loom over other mountains in Guangzhou's
suburban district of Baiyuan and subordinate cities of Conghua and
Zengcheng.
For example, he said merremia boisiana, a woody twiner, once
killed more than 10,000 trees over 300 hectares of mountain terrain
in the suburbs. And at least 13 varieties of orchids are on the
verge of extinction because of alien species.
The city's early warning and inspection system, set up in 2005,
has not been as effective as it was meant to be because it lacks
enough monitoring facilities, Peng said. So the government should
strengthen its network to monitor alien species and update the
early warning system.
More funds needed
Also, Peng asked the local authorities to allot more funds to
monitor and prevent the alien plant invasion because the existing
budget of 150,000 yuan ($19,200) was far from enough.
A deputy to the municipal people's congress, Li Yongli, backed
Peng's proposals, saying: "I've submitted a resolution to the
ongoing conference, calling for a local regulation against alien
species' invasion."
"Without a proper regulation, it would be difficult for
government departments to fight the invasion jointly," he said, and
asked local authorities to make the damage caused by alien species
known to the public.
(China Daily January 26, 2007)
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