Why should we bother tackling the issue of invasive species?

Well it’s all about the loss of biodiversity. When a new species is introduced to an environment where it is not native it can rapidly become established and eliminate native competitors for the shared space.
This in turn has an economic consequence.
Research led by Queen’s University Belfast has shown that invasive species, such as the grey squirrel, European rabbit and Japanese knotweed, have cost the UK economy over £5 billion over the past 40-50 years, making the cost one of the highest totals in Europe.
Researcher Dr Ross Cuthbert explained:
“We have found the majority of costs were caused by direct damages, such as reductions in agricultural productivity and infrastructure repair costs, whereas very little was spent on the actual management of invasive species, and especially prevention of future invasions.
“Worryingly, we also found that invasion costs are increasing rapidly over time and are likely to continue rising in future as more invasive species arrive in the UK.
“These costs are also severely underestimated, as very few of the known invasive species in the UK have reported economic costs (< 10%), indicating a lack of research effort and reporting of their detrimental impacts.”

Invasive species, those introduced and spreading outside of their native range as a result of human activities, are a growing threat to environments worldwide. Environmental impacts of invasive species, one of the main causes of biodiversity loss, are well-studied. However, few studies have summarised their economic impacts.
This study is the largest and most up-to-date combination of economic costs of biological invasions in the UK. The results have been published ) in the journal NeoBiota. It involved an international team of researchers that have built the first global database of invasion costs named InvaCost, led by a team at Paris-Saclay University.
To conduct their study, the researchers examined how costs in the UK were distributed across different invasive species, environments and cost types, and how they have changed through time.
They found that in the last 40-50 years, invasive species have cost the UK economy over £5 billion, with most of the cost due to invasive animals and plants, such as the European rabbit, Japanese knotweed and waterweeds, and predominantly through agricultural or property impacts.
For example, invasive rabbits cause severe damage to agricultural areas by overgrazing, which affects both the growth and yield of key crops, especially considering grasslands and cereals. Their burrowing can also impact the quality of pastures.
Japanese knotweed causes structural damage to property that is expensive to remediate and reduces house values substantially.
Invasive waterweeds can clog waterways, blocking access by watercraft, worsening flood risk and impeding recreational activities such as angling.
The researchers hope this study will raise awareness of the huge economic burden invasive species have on the UK economy for policy makers and society and will promote greater management spending to prevent their damage on different sectors of the economy and ecosystems.
Dr Cuthbert added:
“Investing in better biosecurity to prevent invasive species from arriving in the first place could reduce future economic impacts and be much cheaper than future damages or long-term control.”
The research was funded by the French National Research Agency (ANR-14-CE02-0021), the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation, AXA Research Fund Chair of Invasion Biology and the BNP-Paribas Foundation Climate Initiative.

Categories: Science
There’s always a story….
Years ago, I was visit someone in Gloucestershire. We went for a walk, and I saw all the beautiful Himalayan Balsam growing along the river. I was going to collect some seeds to take home to Wales, but…being a biologist the person I was walking with told me that Himalayan Balsam is destructively invasive – clogging waterways, taking over. She strongly advised me not to collect seed, and, in fact, to pull up the plants whenever I got a chance.
I was completely ignorant of this – completely unaware of the harm my actions could have done, by taking some seed back to Wales.
Presumably, the conditions in its native land, work to limit it to some extent. In Britain, the conditions suit it so well that it …ramps away.
The flowers are so pretty and appealing – the seed heads erupt and spread the seeds far and wide. Very successful at reproducing, spreading and damaging the potential success of other species.
A bit like stoats.
https://gov.wales/sites/default/files/publications/2018-01/himalayan-balsam-controlling-it-on-your-land.pdf