There are too many cockchafers in the Austrian municipality of Gaschurn-Partenen. Now the local population is being asked to help and in return they will receive a free cooling down.
The municipality of Gaschurn-Partenen in Austria has a problem: there are too many cockchafers there. Because of them, farmers are worried about the harvest, and the dead animals are lying on the streets, reports “Vol.at”. But now a solution to this problem could have been found that will benefit everyone in the end.
The beetles should be collected by the public in a five-liter bucket. Anyone who then hands it in at the waste collection point in Gaschurn can look forward to a reward. The community’s Instagram post says: “There is one entry ticket for each bucket for our outdoor pools in Gaschurn or Partenen.”
And that’s not all: “The person who collects the most beetles will receive a season ticket for the Mountain Beach or the Partenen outdoor pool as a thank you.”
As the “Nature Conservation Association of Germany” informs, the female cockchafers lay their eggs in the loose soil after mating. The cockchafer larvae (grubs) develop in the soil. This takes about four years. They feed on plant roots. “The grubs eat the fresh roots and also the bark of larger roots. The root damage can damage the trees to such an extent that water and nutrients can no longer be absorbed or passed on and the tree dies,” writes the Federal Environment Agency.
Cockchafers grow to around 30 millimeters in size and, as adults, feed on a wide variety of deciduous trees and shrubs, according to the Austrian Agency for Health and Food Safety (AGES).
Since she was 19, Anouk has been unable to eat without pain without vomiting. Doctors diagnosed Dunbar syndrome. The 25-year-old explains how much it limits her – but she doesn’t give up hope.
A group of young people is said to have attacked two men in Magdeburg in Saxony-Anhalt, one of whom died. The victim died from life-threatening injuries, police said on Wednesday.