Standing amid ears of wheat growing tall in the buffer zone dividing Cyprus, farmer Christodoulos Christodoulou can rest easy.
The rodents that once ran rampant in the decades since the no-man’s-land was created and destroyed his crops are being driven out by owls.
“Our village was full of rats and mice. They ate our crops, nibbled on our tires,” said Christodoulou, who owns a farm in the demilitarized corridor that splits the internationally recognized Republic of Cyprus and the self-declared Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus.
Photo: AFP
“Then we set up these boxes for the owls,” he said.
About 50 light wooden boxes with circular openings have been installed on tree trunks as part of a 10-year-old initiative led by the BirdLife Cyprus non-governmental organization and the Cypriot government.
BirdLife says the objectives of the project are to encourage farmers to abandon using poison and to help repopulate the barn owl population of Cyprus, which has been in decline across Europe.
Deneia, one of the few villages in the 180km buffer zone that is still inhabited, is now home to between 20 and 50 barn owls and their chicks — recognizable by their milk-white plumage.
The birds of prey are only about 30cm tall, but have large appetites, devouring as many as 5,000 rats and mice a year.
Rodents have proliferated in the corridor in the absence of large amounts of human activity — ransacking agricultural areas.
Farmers have often tried to address the situation with rat poison — harmful to both humans and the environment — before the launch of the initiative.
“The owls are a miracle,” said Christodoulou, who first tried spraying poison on his fields.
Their presence has had a “radical” impact in driving away the rodents and he can now practice organic farming.
Today, thanks to the owls, “to find a rodent here, you would have to search for a week,” Deneia Mayor Christakis Panayiotou said.
BirdLife director Martin Hellicar, who counts more than 1,300 owl boxes across Cyprus, attributes the success of the project to farmers becoming “attached to the barn owls and reconnecting with nature.”
Further west in the same demilitarized corridor, whole villages have been abandoned for decades since the 1974 Turkish invasion of Cyprus, in response to a Greek-sponsored coup attempt.
Bird boxes have gone up in coordination with the UN.
Not far from looming watchtowers manned by some of the 800 UN peacekeepers patrolling the area, a ranger wearing gloves pulls two owl chicks out of a box.
The small creatures blink, blinded by the daylight. With an expert hand, Nikos Kassinis attatches a ring to them with an identification number.
Every year, authorities find the bodies of about 20 owls. Autopsies reveal that many die as a result of consuming rat poison.
“They lose their capacity to fly and get hit by cars,” the mayor said, adding that this most often takes place outside in more populated areas.
Scientist Iris Charalambidou describes the no-man’s land as a “unique” environment for its expanse of largely untouched nature in comparison to the unbridled real-estate development on other parts of the island.
With permission from the UN, the Greek Cypriot specialist sometimes comes to the area with a Turkish Cypriot colleague.
The researcher said being able to work together to observe barn owls in the buffer zone that divides them is “invaluable.”
“Because no bird will ever respect the borders drawn by man,” she said.
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