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Helicopters fly to the rescue of Swedish beetles
(Agencies)
Updated: 2008-11-28 09:52

STOCKHOLM  – Sweden will use helicopters to come to the rescue of a small beetle thought to have disappeared but recently discovered in the northeast, regional officials said Thursday.


A "ghost forest" of dead and dying trees, eaten by beetles. Sweden will use helicopters to come to the rescue of a small beetle thought to have disappeared but recently discovered in the northeast, regional officials said Thursday. [Agencies] 

"About 50 burnt pine stumps, which this species of beetle is particularly fond of, will be transported by helicopter and released ... in the national parks in the region where it was observed," Tomas Rydkvist, a wildlife official in the Oesternorrland region, told AFP.

The beetle, a flatheaded pine borer or Chalcophora mariana, is shiny black and copper in colour and is about three centimetres (about an inch) long.

Rydkvist said the beetle's natural habitat is made up of open, sparse forests with lots of dead trees. Ideally the trees would have burned in a forest fire.

"We thought the species had disappeared from Sweden, as fires are better controlled nowadays. But in the summer of 2007 several specimens were observed" in Oesternorrland, Rydkvist said.

The total cost of the helicopter rescue is expected to amount to around 100,000 kronor (9,800 euros, 12,533 dollars), Rydkvist said, adding that was "not a lot of money."

"If the species disappears, we could spend all the money in the world but it wouldn't help bring it back," he said.

Rydkvist said it was hoped the operation would help to firmly reestablish the beetle in these areas.

The effort is part of government programme aimed at reducing the number of threatened species by 30 percent by 2015, Rydkvist said.