Chinese water resources experts have scored a sweeping victory
against white ants eroding dykes along the flood-prone Huaihe
River.
Zhu Zhifu, Huainan water resources department engineer in east
China's Anhui Province, said during the past two months they had
removed more than 200 cubic meters of earth from three separate
sites infested by termites.
Inside the three-meter-deep holes, experts discovered 18 tunnels
left by the insects, 25 cavities, and one abandoned nest.
After chemical treatment, all holes were sealed up by builders with
high-pressure clay mixed with a special pesticide to ensure no
termites can launch a counter-attack on the embankment.
Termites were first detected on April 27 when a tractor loaded with
sand and stone suddenly sank into a nest. The vital embankment
extends for six kilometers on the Heili Section of the Huaihe
River.
As
this was the first time termites had been found undermining Huaihe
River dykes, the Ministry of Water Resources earmarked 200, 000
yuan (US$24,096) and despatched an emergency squad of termite
prevention and water conservancy experts.
According to Zhu, the fast-breeding insect is to blame for nearly
half the country's leaking and collapsing dykes and poses a severe
threat to the security of embankments.
With the flood season underway, local water resource department
workers have regularly inspected the dyke but found no more termite
tunnels.
(China Daily July 20, 2002)
|