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The City of Cape Town is offering a free training session about the invasive Polyphagous Shot Hole Borer beetle (PSHB) to all businesses that handle trees and plant material. The intention is to educate the public on how to identify infested trees, and manage and transport beetle infested biomass to prevent the spread of the pest as far as possible. The training session will be hosted at the Alphen Hall in Constantia on Friday evening, 7 June 2024. Residents are also welcome to attend.
Read more below:
To date, trees have been infested in Alphen in Constantia, in Penhill in Eerste River, Newlands, Rondebosch, Mowbray, Claremont, Kenilworth, and Observatory along the Liesbeek River, as well as in the Helderberg area. Amongst these are Boxelders, London Planes, English Oaks, Beef Wood, Weeping Willow, Cape Chestnut, Black Locust, Paperbark and Maples.
‘The PSHB poses a serious threat to Cape Town’s urban forest as infested trees have to be chipped. Importantly, the use of pesticides and fungicides have not proven effective at eradicating PSHB from infected trees. We need the support and collaboration of residents and businesses working with plant material to prevent the spread of the pest. I encourage residents and businesses to attend the City’s free training session,’ said the City’s Deputy Mayor and Mayoral Committee Member for Spatial Planning and Environment, Alderman Eddie Andrews.
The details of the training session are as follows:
Officials from the City’s Invasive Species Unit will host the training session, and provide facts about the beetle, how it spreads, the threat it poses, and the infestations recorded in Cape Town to date.
The PSHB beetle can easily spread across suburbs if extra precaution is not taken. Apart from infected wood, the beetle can also spread through clothing, vehicle crevices, or unclean horticultural equipment.
The City will focus on the protocols applicable to infested trees and biomass, among which:
‘There are many formal and informal businesses involved with gardening and landscaping. These are gardeners, nurseries, horticulturists, tree fellers, woodcutters, and many more. We are also encouraging residents to attend, especially if you have trees on your private property,’ said Alderman Andrews.
What to look out for and symptoms of infested trees:
Important: infested trees must be chipped on site and may not be removed from the property as the removal of the chipped wood will spread the pest to other areas. Do not buy and move fire wood from areas where trees are infested.
How to report PSHB beetle sightings
What to do:
The City will try its best to respond within 10 working days to verify a reported sighting. However, the response time will depend on the number of sightings reported.
Supplied by: City of Cape Town and Photo by Grant Durr on Unsplash
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