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Agriculture News South Africa

FAO hosts high-level meeting to tackle Red Palm Weevil

The UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) in Rome recently hosted a high-level meeting to debate and define an international action plan to stop the spread of the Red Palm Weevil. The pest has rapidly spread across the globe, threatening date and coconut production.
by Katja Schulz, CC BY 2.0
Red Palm Weevil Larva by Katja Schulz, CC BY 2.0

Over the last three decades the weevil has spread rapidly through the Middle East and North Africa, affecting almost every country in the region. In total it has now been detected in more than 60 countries including France, Greece, Italy, Spain and parts of the Caribbean and Central America.

"The Red Palm Weevil represents the most dangerous threat to date palm," FAO assistant director-general and regional representative for Near East and North Africa, Abdessalam Ould Ahmed told attendees at the opening session. "Insufficient implementation of phytosanitary standards, lack of an effective preventive strategy and insufficient monitoring of response measures explain the failure in containing the pest so far."

The Scientific Consultation and High-Level Meeting on Red Palm Weevil was hosted by the FAO in collaboration with the International Centre for Advanced Mediterranean Agronomic Studies (CIHEAM). "The Mediterranean area harbours a vast biodiversity of plant species that must be protected for social, economic and environmental reasons. A sustainable protection strategy is therefore more essential than ever to protect the whole region from phytosanitary threats," said Cosimo Lacirignola, secretary-general of CIHEAM.

An invisible killer

The weevil causes economic losses in the millions of dollars annually, whether through lost production or pest-control costs. In Gulf countries and the Middle East, $8m is lost each year through removal of severely infested trees alone. In Italy, Spain and France, the combined cost of pest management, eradication and replacement of infested palms, and loss of benefits was around €90m by 2013. This cost is forecast to increase to €200m by 2023 if a rigorous containment program is not in place.

Part of the problem is that the Red Palm Weevil is extremely difficult to detect in the early stages of an infestation because there are few externally visible signs that the pest has taken over a tree: around 80% of the pest's lifecycle is hidden from view. For extremely tall species, an infestation in the crown of the tree is even harder to detect. Once an infestation has taken hold, it is too late to save the tree.

Oasis communities at risk

Palm trees are an important resource for many communities in the Middle East and North Africa. Dates have been a basic food staple for centuries, and are now an important economic crop. More than 7-million tonnes of dates are produced annually. In total, around 100-million date palm trees are cultivated today, 60% of them in Arab countries. The Red Palm Weevil attacks young, soft trees that are less than 20 years old. Around half of the 100-million date palm trees fit this criteria and are therefore vulnerable.

The trees are also vital to maintaining the oasis cultivation system, whereby other productive trees and plants can grow under the palms' canopy. If the Red Palm Weevil is not stopped, production will be heavily impacted which could trigger economic migration from oases communities to urban areas.

High-tech solutions

The Scientific Consultation and High-Level Meeting on Red Palm Weevil focused on containing the pest's spread. Advances in integrated pest control were shared such as the targeted and reduced use of insecticides and bio-pesticides, low-cost, highly sensitive microphones that can detect larvae feeding inside a tree, pheromone-based traps, drones, remote-sensing, and sniffer dogs. During the high-level session on Friday government representatives discussed and adopted a multi-disciplinary and multi-regional strategy that includes effective implementation of cross-border phytosanitary standards.

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