Invasive Trees like Eucalyptus Targeted by New South Africa Anti-Drought Fund
CAPE TOWN – Big business is backing a South African fund to eradicate invasive trees around Cape Town and yield billions of litres of water as the city emerges from its worst drought in a century, officials said on Friday. Alien species, such as eucalyptus trees which are largely native to Australia, are thirstier than […]
CAPE TOWN – Big business is backing a South African fund to eradicate invasive trees around Cape Town and yield billions of litres of water as the city emerges from its worst drought in a century, officials said on Friday.
Alien species, such as eucalyptus trees which are largely native to Australia, are thirstier than indigenous vegetation and draw more groundwater through their roots. Preliminary studies estimate 1.8 billion litres of water is lost each year due to alien plants on one aquifer north of Cape Town.
“In order to secure our long-term water supplies, we need to pursue a range of cost effective strategies. One of those is to clear vegetation in our catchments that reduce the runoff into our dams,” Ian Neilson, Cape Town’s deputy mayor, said in a statement.
An initial R53 million ($3.7 million) has been committed to the new Greater Cape Town Water Fund, which has been pioneered by global conservation organisation Nature Conservancy.
The group said plans by the city for desalination, recycling waste water and tapping groundwater supplies would cost on average 10 times more to supply each litre of water than clearing invasive eucalyptus, pine and exotic (Australian) acacia trees. (This does not refer to the well known African acacia trees with long thorns that South Africans love so much. These are no longer called Acacia, since 2011 when that genus became reserved for the 900 odd species native to Australia. Our formerly-known-as Acacias now belong to the Vachellia genus – which has “capitate inflorescences (round, head-like flowers) and spinescent stipules (thorns) – or Senegalia – which has spicate inflorescences (flowers in spikes) and the stipules are non-spinescent”, according to an article by Colin Dyer in 2014.)
The Nature Conservancy added that R372 million could fund a 30-year programme to clear invasive trees and prevent them from returning to seven sub-catchments supplying around three-quarters of Cape Town’s water needs.
“In its first six years, a programme of clearing invasive plants could yield 56 billion litres of new supplies,” it said in a statement.
(Reporting by Wendell Roelf; editing by David Stamp)