The governance of urban pest management in Israel
ניהול של מערך הדברת המזיקים העירוניים בישראל
Keywords:
Integrated pest management, invasive pests, pest control, professional licensing, public health, urban pest management, workforce, workforce trends, Israel, Middle EastAbstract
Invasive and sanitary pests such as fire ants, Formosan subterranean termites and virus-carrying mosquitoes pose increasing economic and health hazards in urban environments in Israel. Licensed urban pest management specialists are the country’s first line of defense, and this article aims to delineate historical and current trends in their numbers and training. In 2016, following a tragedy due to pesticide misuse, licensing of new specialists was improved by adoption of a new law in 2020, which introduced new regulations. Drawing on government reports, data accepted directly from the governmental sources and Ministry of Environmental Protection newsletters (2016–2025), I have tracked the size of the certified workforce and placed the primary emphasis on the pass rates of licensing examinations rather than on training programs, since the law passed and the regulation came into effect. Despite rapid population growth, urban expansion and rising pest pressure, the number of licensed urban pest management specialists has stalled or declined, and their pass rates are inconsistent with increasing demands. This mismatch between the ecological rationale, public health needs and professional capacity is complicated by fragmented, often contradictory, information regarding the available workforce. This report underscores the urgency of strengthening of the training, licensing and oversight systems to sustain Israel’s ability to respond effectively to pest outbreaks and pest-borne hazards.
To cite: Trablsi, Y. 2026. The governance of urban pest management in Israel. Israel Journal of Entomology 55: 1–12. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.18365577
urn:lsid:zoobank.org:pub:8629D1E5-6CD3-4478-8576-96330E7F2C33
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Copyright (c) 2026 Trablsi Yechezkel

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