Africa Asia Middle East عربي Français PlusNews Film & TV Photo Radio free subscription Mobile RSS find IRIN on facebook follow IRIN on twitter



humanitarian news and analysis
a project of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

Advanced search
 Saturday 21 November 2009 Latest reports:
 
Home 
Africa 
Asia 
Middle East 
Weekly reports 
Global Issues 
In-Depth reports 
Maps 
Most popular 
 
HyperLink Bookmark and Share
AFRICA: Tsetse fly costs agriculture billions every year


Photo: IAEA
Countries in Africa's "tsetse belt"
DAKAR, 12 May 2009 (IRIN) - Each year in Africa the tsetse fly causes more than US$4 billion in agriculture income losses, kills three million livestock and infects up to 75,000 people with trypanosomiasis, according to the UN. Though sterilising the flies may help wipe out the offending parasite, it is a long, expensive process that is losing experts to other more well-funded health research, according to scientists.

The head of the human African trypanosomiasis (“sleeping sickness”) programme at the Geneva-based Foundation for Innovative New Diagnostics (FIND), Joseph Ndung'u, told IRIN he left his position as director of the Kenyan Trypanosomiasis Research Institute in order to expand his work beyond Kenya.

“But it is true that many scientists [in Africa] are moving away from tsetse flies to other diseases that are seen as more sexy,” he said.

Ndung’u said the steep drop in the number of humans affected by trypanosomiasis – from an estimated half-million a decade ago to 75,000 in 2007 according to World Health Organization (WHO) – has reduced funding for tsetse fly research, surveillance and disease control.

“But the disease is still as deadly in animals,” Ndung'u added. The parasite causes “wasting disease”, or nagana, which leads to fever, anemia and possibly death.

Without these animals, sub-Saharan Africans earn, eat and produce only a fraction of what they could otherwise, according to the UN Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO).

Poverty fly

“It is a poverty fly,” said Jorge Hendrichs, the head of the insect and pest control section of a joint FAO and International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) project. “Why are there lush green areas with very hungry poor people? Look closer and you will notice women working the land with their bare hands. There are simply no animals in the poorest rural areas of Africa. Tsetse [flies] have killed the cattle that would have pulled plows in the fields or transported food to the market.”

More on tsetse flies
 World Health Organization    
 International Atomic Energy Agency
 Pan African Tsetse and Trypanosomiasis Eradication Campaign
 African Union
Ninety perc ent of the crops grown in sub-Saharan Africa are produced without animal power, which costs the continent more than $4 billion in losses every year, according to FAO.

Nuclear

By sterilising male flies with radiation and releasing them into endemic areas, scientists have been able to wipe out a number of species over the past 50 years.

But IAEA’s Hendrichs told IRIN despite that this technique was effective for the Mediterranean fruit fly in Mexico and the melon fly in Japan, only Tanzania has declared the island of Zanzibar tsetse fly free after donors helped fund a $6-million sterilisation project in the late 1980s.

The most heavily affected countries include Uganda, the Democratic Republic of Congo and Angola.

IAEA director Hendrichs told IRIN a lack of experts and poor management have held back tsetse fly elimination in Africa. “Tsetse flies are partly an insect problem, but it is also a human resource management issue. These programmes are not simple. You need a lot of political will. You cannot run it through any government bureaucracy. You need to create reliable management teams that are not corrupt or [do not] have other interests.”


Photo: IAEA
Wasting, death can be immediate after tsetse bites
Hendrichs added that qualified scientists and IAEA-trained civil servants tend to leave Africa to seek higher-paying employment elsewhere. “A number of the [IAEA] fellows disappear into the private sector, or simply disappear during training.”

IAEA trains up to 20 scientists every year on tsetse fly control.

FIND scientist Ndung'u told IRIN he is sticking with tsetse flies. “Whereas the impact [of our work] on humans may not be so obvious, the link to Africa’s agriculture is what makes tsetse flies so important. With oxen to pull plows, you can produce 10 times more, feed yourself and your children and have enough to sell at the market.”

He added: “If we want to make a difference in Africa, our work must start and end with tsetse flies.”

pt/np


Theme(s): (IRIN) Food Security, (IRIN) Health & Nutrition

[ENDS]

[This report does not necessarily reflect the views of the United Nations]
HyperLink Bookmark and Share
Countries
FREE Subscriptions
Your e-mail address:


Submit your request
 More reports
  • 21/Nov/2009
    SOUTH AFRICA: Life expectancy drops
  • 20/Nov/2009
    GUINEA: Timeline since independence
  • 20/Nov/2009
    UGANDA: HIV-positive women need family planning services, study shows
  • 20/Nov/2009
    HORN OF AFRICA: IRIN-HOA Weekly Round-up 493 for 14 - 20 November 2009
  • 20/Nov/2009
    CENTRAL AND EASTERN AFRICA: IRIN-CEA Weekly Round-up 506 for 14 - 20 November 2009
     More on Food Security
  • 20/Nov/2009
    DRC-CONGO: New wave of refugees flees fresh fighting
  • 18/Nov/2009
    GLOBAL: Food aid that gets you two for the price of one
  • 15/Nov/2009
    In Brief: Israel transfers calves to Gaza as a ‘humanitarian gesture’
  • 12/Nov/2009
    In Brief: World hunger increases despite growth in food production
  • 12/Nov/2009
    GLOBAL: We can have food security, say two new reports
     Most Read
    GUINEA: Timeline since independence
    GLOBAL: Children’s rights not yet a reality
    UGANDA: HIV-positive women need family planning services, study shows
    BANGLADESH: Two years after Cyclone Sidr, survivors still seeking shelter
    DRC-CONGO: New wave of refugees flees fresh fighting

    Services:  Africa | Asia | Middle East | PlusNews | Film & TV | Photo | Radio | Weekly | Live news map | Interviews | E-mail subscription
    Feedback | E-mail Webmaster | Terms & Conditions | Really Simple Syndication News Feeds | About IRIN | Jobs | Bookmark IRINnews | Donors

    Copyright © IRIN 2009. All rights reserved.
    This material comes to you via IRIN, the humanitarian news and analysis service of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. The opinions expressed do not necessarily reflect those of the United Nations or its Member States. The boundaries, names and designations used on maps on this site do not imply official endorsement or acceptance by the UN. Republication is subject to terms and conditions as set out in the IRIN copyright page.