Video Of The Week - Israeli Barn Owls in pest control https://tinyurl.com/ydal7sfp
by
ISRAEL21c 12-2-2018
The path
to peace in the Middle East might be navigated not via a dove carrying an olive
branch but by a lowly barn owl.
Barn owls
have been used in Israel since 1982 as an alternative to toxic chemicals for
killing voles, which at the time plagued Israeli agricultural fields. The
preferred chemical against rodents – known as compound 1080 – had been banned a
decade earlier in the United States, although not in Israel.
Ornithologist
Yossi Leshem thought that owls might be able to control the rodents more
naturally.
Leshem
set up an experiment at Kibbutz Sde Eliyahu in 1983. Three decades later, the
barn owl approach has spread throughout the Palestinian territories and into
Jordan as well.
“Birds
have the power to bring people together, because they know no boundaries,” says
Leshem, who teaches at Tel Aviv University.
That’s in
part how 22 participants from 10 governments (including Egypt, Tunisia,
Morocco, Cyprus, Greece, France and Switzerland in addition to Israel, the
Palestinian Authority and Jordan) came together in January to share research
from their barn owl vs. rodent experiences.
The group
met at the Crowne Plaza resort hotel on the Jordanian side of the Dead Sea
where they discussed scientific findings and hatch plans. Field trips were
organized to visit barn owl nesting boxes in the Jordan Valley, as well as to
Amman and Petra. A follow-up in March will see some of the Middle Eastern
researchers visit California State University in Sacramento, where they will be
hosted by conservation biologist Sara Kross.
While the
topic was formally owls, regional peace was never far from discussion.
“Scientists
should continue their cooperation for the benefit and peace of people in the
area,” emphasized Mansour Abu Rashid, who works with Leshem and directs the
Amman Center for Peace and Development.
The
program could have been limited to just Israel farms. But the owls didn’t stop
at the border and the Palestinians and Jordanians hadn’t switched from
rodenticides to owls. In 2002, Leshem and Abu Rashid began to collaborate.
There was
some resistance at first – the barn owls, which are a striking white in color,
are considered a bad omen in some parts of the Middle East. Violence in the
past decade also set back the conservation efforts at times, but eventually US
and European funds were secured to launch a cross-border project. And most
farmers were convinced after seeing the results.
A pair of
barn owls can consume between 2,000 and 6,000 small animals per year and fly up
to 7 kilometers away from their nesting boxes each night in search of prey.
Today, there are thousands of nesting boxes for barn owls in Israel and
hundreds elsewhere in the region.
Compound
1080 is still used in some Israeli fields, although it’s down almost 60 percent
since the program began.
But it’s
the prospect of “owls for peace” that ignites the imagination of non-farmers.
“In a
conflict area, a project like this or any project in common can help,” Leshem
says. “I know I’m not going to solve the problems of the Middle East, but I can
do my small part.”
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