Russia

For years, Russian landowners have watched a toxic, invasive plant species spread across their properties like wildfire and have been helpless to act.Sosnovsky’s hogweed — a monstrous plant that can tower up tofivemeters in height — has spread unchecked across the country, wreaking havoc on ecosystems and landingthousandsin the hospital every year. “I was burned, even through a tarp storm jacket,” said biologist and forestry expert Alexei Yaroshenko, who once mowed hogweed on his property while wearing waterproof fabric.“It was the hogweed sap that flew from the hand scythe [that caused my burns].

The burns were healing for six months,” Yaroshenko told The Moscow Times.In a bid to combat the plant, Russian lawmakers in February preliminarily approved a bill imposing hefty fines on those who fail to clear it from their properties. If passed into law, the “anti-hogweed bill” will force individuals to roll up their sleeves and clear this unyielding plant from their lands — but at their own risk.Hogweed sap contains furanocoumarins, toxic compounds that can cause third-degree burns when exposed to sunlight as well as blindness.

Severe burns covering over 80% of the body can be fatal.Due to its high reproduction rate, with a single plant yielding from 20,000 to 100,000 seeds, hogweed currently dominates up to 15% of the natural landscapes of European Russia, some estimates suggest.Sosnovsky’s hogweed in the Tver region.MTYaroshenko estimated that hogweed thickets have spread across 1 million hectares in Russia — an area roughly equivalent to Cyprus or Lebanon.As hogweed continues to take over Russia's roadsides, fields and dachas, experts question how effective the new law will be without systemic solutions.The new law imposes fines of up to 50,000 rubles ($540) on individuals — about two-thirds of the average Russian salary in 2023 — and up to 700,000 rubles ($7,550) on legal entities for failing to eliminate the aggressive plant from their properties.In practice, these fines are likely to be arbitrary, targeting whoever happens to get caught, Yaroshenko said.“Right now, our government tends to address all problems with fines at best or imprisonment at worst,” he said.“This approach is ineffective because it's impossible to fine everyone.

Hogweed is growing practically everywhere now — on any farmer's or agricultural business’s land.”Soviet experimentsFollowing Russian officials’ narrative of blaming the West for the nation's problems, State Duma deputy Timofei Bazhenovclaimed without evidence in February that hogweed may be "part of the U.S.

bacteriological warfare against Russia." The real picture is closer to one of self-inflicted harm. After World War II, Soviet scientistsembarkedon a quest to find new high-yielding foraging crops to feed livestock. Sosnowsky's hogweed, distinguished by its cold resistance and phenomenal productivity, gained momentum and was deliberately broughtfrom its natural habitat in the mountainous forests of the Caucasus to the center of the U.S.S.R., where it easily dominated the native low-lying grasses.During the post-war famine, many Soviet regions embracedhogweed growth until concerns about its safety brought its cultivation to a halt.

By that point, it was too late to stop hogweed’s relentless spread across the country.These days, the plant is so ubiquitous that it has even permeated Russian pop culture, being featured in popular TV series, computer games and rock songs.

One internet user prompted AI togenerateimages from the HBO series “The Last of Us” if it took place in Soviet Russia, with people getting infected with hogweed instead of cordyceps.According to Yaroshenko, about 90% of hogweed tickets in Russia are found on abandoned agricultural lands — vast areas rendered unprofitable for cultivation after the Soviet collapse and Russia’s turn to a market economy.While reforestation on those lands could help alleviate the hogweed problem, this is prohibited under current laws."This colossal seed productivity of hogweed is observed on open agricultural lands in full sunlight,” Yaroshenko said.

“But under the canopy of a dense shady forest, hogweed’s growth is much more fragile."Yaroshenko expects that many abandoned farmlands in Russia will not only remain unusable but expand with time as agricultural practices become more efficient — creating more fertile ground for hogweed’s conquest.“Alternative forms of land use are needed.

Allowing [people and businesses] to grow forests is one of the most effective ways because the forest serves as both an economic asset and a means of combating hogweed,” Yaroshenko said.He added that current regulations, with multiple official checks and stringent reporting requirements, are crippling Russia’s farmers and small agricultural producers, which "practically cannot survive." “There is no way that people will survive and thrive as regulations become more nightmarish,” Yaroshenko said.

"This means that we will have a new wave of abandonment of agricultural lands.”“Hogweed will say ‘thank you’."Sosnovsky’s hogweed flowers.Krzysztof Ziarnek (CC BY-SA 4.0)A silent disasterOnce it takes over a particular area, hogweed effectively displaces local species, significantly threatening biodiversity. As the ecological consequences of the plant’s proliferation are often not immediately apparent, activist groups refer to it as a "slowly unfolding environmental catastrophe." By the time a dacha owner suspects something is wrong on their property, millions of hogweed seeds have already permeated the soil.As Russians continue to abandon small villages in favor of cities, which are now home to three-quarters of the country’s population, there might be even fewer people on the ground  to battle the plant’s spread in the future.    The Anti-Hogweed grassroots group, a collective ofthousands of hogweed fighters from across Russia, equips individuals with strategies for eliminating the plant from affected lands and preserving still-untouched areas.Clamping down on hogweed remains challenging because of the common practice of focusing on thickets while neglecting areas where individual plants are growing, a representative of the Anti-Hogweed grassroots group told The Moscow Times.Sosnovsky’s hogweed in the Moscow region.MTMany also struggle to distinguish hogweed from other species or lack knowledge of its threats to nature, a representative for the group said, requesting anonymity due to the risks of speaking to foreign media.Along with activists’ efforts, there’s a need for a government-led awareness campaign similar to those during the peak of the Covid-19 pandemic, the representative said."[Something] like 'wear masks, wash hands,' so that it would resonate from all directions."According to the Earth Touches Me environmental project, combating invasive species like hogweed requiresa comprehensive state program, substantial funding and public awareness efforts. Otherwise, eradicating hogweed will remain an uphill battle that will only worsen with climate change.Skoltech researchers warnedin 2022 that the planet’s warming would enable Sosnovsky’s hogweed to expand its habitat, potentially engulfing almost all of European Russia by 2050.The plant has already been spotted beyond the Arctic Circle on the Yamal Peninsula, raising concerns for traditional indigenous livelihoods.Having seen hogweed with his own eyes in Russia’s northern Arkhangelsk region several years ago, Yaroshenko said he believes the plant will spread even further as the planet continues to warm.Amid the high costs and complexity of combating the invasive plant, he warned that the hogweed problem will require more attention than merely imposing fines. “If there are no serious additional support measures from the state, the issue will not be resolved.” 





Unlimited Portal Access + Monthly Magazine - 12 issues-Publication from Jan 2021


Buy Our Merchandise (Peace Series)

 


Contribute US to Start Broadcasting



It's Voluntary! Take care of your Family, Friends and People around You First and later think about us. Its Fine if you dont wish to contribute and if you wish to contribute then think about the Homeless first and Feed them. We can survive with your wishes too :-). You can Buy our Merchandise too which are of the finest quality.


STRIPE


[Russia] - U.K. Sanctions Russian Army Commander Over Ukraine Chemical Weapons Claims


[Russia] - EU Approves Sanctions Framework Against 'Hybrid Threats'


[Russia] - Moscow Luxury Housing Sales Hit Record $1.8 Bln in 2024-- Vedomosti


[Russia] - Russia's Youngest Political Prisoner, 16, Says Beaten by Cellmate


[Russia] - Russian Opposition Activist Slits Wrists in Court -Rights Group


Five Russians Killed Climbing Mountain in Nepal ? Tourism Official


N. Korean Soldiers ‘Highly Likely' Killed in Ukraine & Seoul


[Russia] - Russia, China Hold Joint Navy Patrol in the Pacific


[Russia] - Over 1K Evacuated After Ukraine Hits Annexed Crimea's 'Largest' Oil Depot


Putin To Meet Iran President in Turkmenistan on Friday ? News Agencies


[Russia] - Moscow Arrests Man for ‘& lsquo; LGBT Propaganda & and & lsquo; Satanism 'Russia on Monday arrested a medic for Satanism and promoting same-sex relationships, as Moscow heightens a legal crackdown on LGBTQ+ rights in defense of


Despite Fears of Wider Middle East War, Russian Emigres in Israel Say They Are Unlikely to Leave


[Russia] - Two Major Buyers Said To Bid for Raiffeisenbank Russia


[Russia] - Russia Jails Ukrainian Woman 8 Years for Annexation Day Bomb Plot-- Mediazona


[Russia] - Russian Schoolchildren Forced to Send Putin Birthday Wishes On-Camera


[Russia] - Putin Halts Visits to Sochi Residence Due to Safety Concerns-- Proekt


[Russia] - Russia Jails U.S. 'Mercenary', 72, for Nearly 7 Years


[Russia] - Belgorod Region Offers Record 3M Ruble Military Sign-Up Payment


Putin?s ?Merchant of Death? Viktor Bout Returns to Arms Trading Business ? WSJ


Russian State Media Corporation Hit By ?Unprecedented? Hacking Attack ? Reports


Ukraine Says Hit Crimea Oil Terminal, Russia Claims Gains


[Russia] - Russian Activist Killed on Front Line in Ukraine


[Russia] - Russia Arrests Dutch Citizen for 'Violence Against Police'A Russian


Russia Sentences Crimean to 14 Years on Treason Charges


Putin Abandons Peace Talks, Seeks to Destroy Ukrainian State After Kursk Incursion ? Report


Investigators Collected Snow, Underwear and More From Scene of Navalny?s Death ? Dossier Center


[Russia] - FSB Chief Calls Pager Attacks a 'Direct Threat' to CIS Countries


[Russia] - In Russia's Caucasus, a Tentative Border Redraw Edges Republics Closer to Instability


[Russia] - 'Russian Spy' Whale Likely Died of Infection-- Norwegian Police


[Russia] - Beached Orcas Rescued Off Russian Coast


[Russia] - Siberian Region Declares 'High Alert' Over Electricity Shortages


Car Bomb Kills Security Chief at Ukraine's Russian-Held Nuclear Plant


[Russia] - Russia Calls On West to Lift Sanctions on Afghanistan


[Russia] - Ukraine Claims Attack on Russian Oil Depot


Russia Evacuates Diplomats' Family Members from Lebanon


[Russia] - Moldova Uncovers 'Unprecedented' Pro-Russia Vote Rigging


Ukraine Claims Drone Strike on Russia?s Borisoglebsk Air Base ? Reports


What Went Wrong for Ukraine at Vuhledar


How the War in Ukraine Split the Orthodox Church


[Russia] - Moscow Nurse Jailed 8 Years for Anti-War Posts


[Russia] - Russian 'Mercenary' Trial of 72-Year-Old American Made Secret


[Russia] - Rescuers Working to Save Stranded Orca Whale Family in Russia's Far East


[Russia] - Russian Beaten By Kadyrov's Son for Quran-Burning Charged With Treason


Putin Names Separatist Officer as Kremlin Envoy to Russia's Defense Hub


[Russia] - Tolstoy Descendants Feud Over Russian Peace Prize


[Russia] - Beyonce, Lana Del Rey, Metallica 'Blacklisted' in Russia-- Vyorstka


[Russia] - Russia Opens Criminal Case Against Cryptex, UAPS Payment System Creators


[Russia] - On the Pokrovsk Front, Ukrainian Forces Struggle To Keep Back the Russian Advance


[Russia] - Russia Allows Criminal Defendants to eliminate in Ukraine


[Russia] - Trial Opens for Russian Journalists in Navalny 'Extremism' Case


EU Moves to Sanction Russia Over Hybrid Attacks


[Russia] - Russia's 2025 Budget Seen as Pro-Inflationary-- Analysts


[Russia] - Kremlin Calls for 'Restraint' After Iran Missile Attack on Israel


[Russia] - Ukraine Army Says Withdrawing From Eastern Stronghold of Vuhledar


Kyiv Accuses Russian Troops of Executing 16 Ukrainian POWs


[Russia] - Russia Opens Criminal Case Against Opposition Politician Shlosberg


[Russia] - Russia's 'Evil Corp' Hackers Unmasked by Sweeping Sanctions


[Russia] - China's Xi Tells Putin Ready to ‘& lsquo; Expand' Ties-- State Media


Russian Court Imprisons 13 Young Men for Anti-War Sabotage Acts


[Russia] - Numerous Baby Kangaroos Go Missing in Russia in Less Than a Week


[Russia] - Moscow Condemns Israel's Raids Into Lebanon, Urges Troop Withdrawal


[Russia] - Russia Adds DOXA Co-Founder Aramyan to 'Terrorists and Extremists' List


[Russia] - Russia's Army Plans to Enlist 20K Criminal Defendants for Ukraine War-- IStories


Russia's FSB Detains Nearly 40 Alleged Supporters of 'Ukrainian Terrorist' Groups


[Russia] - Germany's Scholz Plans Phone Call With Putin-- Die Zeit


Russian Manufacturing Activity Dips for First Time Since April 2022


St. Petersburg Bans Holocaust Memorial Event, Citing Covid-19 Restrictions


Russian Strike on Kherson Kills 6


Wildberries CEO Announces Successful Merger With Russ Group Following Dispute


Moscow Police Arrest 3 Journalists Outside Annexation Celebration on Red Square





66