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Title: Module 1:


1
Developing legal and institutional frameworksfor
invasive alien species
Module 1 what decision-makers need to know about
invasive species
2
what this module covers
  • what invasive alien species and invasion
    means
  • pathways for species introductions
  • impacts of IAS
  • problems of prediction and links to other
    environmental pressures
  • the importance of information and available
    international resources

3
what are invasive alien species?
  • many different terms a complex area

an alien species is a species that has been
introduced to a location (ecosystem or area)
where it does not occur naturally an invasive
alien species (IAS) is an alien species that
causes (or has the potential to cause) harm to
the environment, economies and/or human health
4
introductions are nothing new...
...but globalisation has led to massive expansion
of opportunities for introductions
5
what type of species invade?
  • from all taxonomic groups
  • vertebrates (e.g. mammals, fish, birds, reptiles)
  • invertebrates (e.g. insects, snails, worms)
  • aquatic, marine and terrestrial plants (e.g.
    weeds, trees)
  • micro-organisms (e.g. viruses, bacteria)

6
Process of Invasion
1. Introduction
intentional or unintentional
2. Establishment
survives but doesnt spread
(a) naturalisation becomes part of new
habitats flora/fauna
3. Spread
(b) invasion expands and impacts on species,
ecosystems people and development
7
1. Introduction 2. Establishment 3a.Spread -
Naturalisation 3b. SPREAD - INVASION
the House Sparrow spreading and invading Tanzania
over 90 years
8
  • Many IAS undergo a lag phase after initial
    establishment, and may remain unobtrusive before
    becoming invasive and spreading rapidly
  • In some species (e.g. trees) this may be more
    than 100 years, in others (e.g. water hyacinth)
    it may be a few weeks

9
habitat occupation changes during invasion
Introduction
Invasion
Consolidation
  • Process of Invasion from Introduction to
    Consolidation
  • (after Williams, 2003)

10
Invasions can thus be stopped at several stages
  • best is prevention stopping introductions
  • next best is eradication destroying or removing
    a new invasion
  • third is containment stopping a new invasion
    from further spreading
  • last (and most expensive and time-consuming) is
    management of established invasions restoration
    of affected systems
  • Sequence endorsed under Convention on Biological
    Diversity

11
how do species get moved around?
  • Vectors The specific mechanism by which a
    species is moved along a pathway (clothing,
    vehicle, boat hulls, ballast water, packaging,
    soil around plant roots...)
  • e.g. a tourist carrying seeds is a vector in the
    pathway of international airline flights
  • Pathways The routes along which a species is
    moved or moves itself (roads, railways, air
    corridors, shipping lanes, rivers) ... including
    trade itself

12
Shipping routes now reach every continent (even
Antarctica) and air travel reaches most cities in
the world
13
ballast water
  • a major vector for unintentional introductions in
    the shipping pathway
  • up to 14 billion tonnes of ballast water
    transported around the world each year
  • an estimated 7 000 10 000 species may be
    present in ballast water at any given time

Zebra mussels were introduced to the Great Lakes
of North America in ballast water in the 1980s,
and now cause severe economic impacts
14
direct indirect causes of introductions
15
introduction of species
Movement by human action of a species outside its
native range can result in introduction
(into/within a country)
Some establish, naturalise and spread
Some establish, naturalise and spread
16
  • intentional introduction
  • unintentional introduction

17
impacts of IAS
  • negative impacts on
  • ecosystems
  • economies
  • human health

18
ecological impacts
  • direct predation/herbivory
  • competition for resources/exclusion (e.g. light,
    food)
  • transmission of pathogens and parasites
  • alteration of micro-climate, nutrient
    availability, ecoystem cycles (energy, water,
    minerals, organics)
  • disturbance to ecological processes (e.g.
    pollination)
  • disruption of ecosystem services (e.g. flood
    attenuation)
  • environmental degradation, facilitating further
    invasions

19
economic impactsestimated at 5 global GDP
  • Direct costs
  • Direct loss of crops, reduced yields
  • Lost export earnings
  • Loss of tourism revenues
  • Management costs
  • Indirect costs
  • Impaired ecosystem services
  • Damaged infrastructure
  • Costs to natural environment and societal or
    cultural values

20
health impacts
  • Direct impacts
  • Disease
  • Allergic reactions
  • Injuries through stinging or biting
  • Indirect impacts
  • Providing a vector for disease

21
Millennium Ecosystem Assessment /Emerson Howard
22
Lantana camara is a classic IAS which (after 160
years) is still spreading across Africa and
invading new lands - as well as in Australia,
Asia and North America
Lantana replaces native vegetation and pasture,
is poisonous to livestock and harbours tsestse
flies and rats
23
an example of spread and invasion impacts
The Kafue Floodplain was home to many wild
animals and plants cattle grazing, fishing,
conservation tourism
Kafue Floodplain, Zambia, dry
1974
Kafue Floodplain flooded
  • In 1974 there was an occasional plant of Mimosa
    pigra on the edges of the Kafue River

1974
24
Mimosa pigra (continued)
  • A heavy flood in 1981/2 brought a few plants of
    Mimosa pigra on to the floodplain

(which was a new ecosystem changed by a dam
upstream)
1982
25
Mimosa pigra (continued)
  • After a slow start in the late 1980s, M. pigra
    began to spread
  • By 2000 it was covering a few hundred hectares

2001
26
Mimosa pigra (continued)
  • By 2007 it was growing up to 4m high and covering
    3,000 hectares

2007
. and excluding almost every other plant and
most animals .
2007
27
Mimosa pigra continued
3,000 ha of an available 12,000 ha are now covered
  • Today
  • no livestock
  • no fisheries
  • no tourism on this part of the Kafue Floodplain

costs to livelihoods production
28
invasion impacts human development
  • Water hyacinth affecting Kafue Gorge Dam and
    hydropower station, Zambia
  • (photo M. Mumba)

29
impacts on production (eco)systems
  • ecosystems, native or cultured, that are used for
    food and commodity production can also be invaded
    by alien species
  • forestry, fisheries, agriculture, aquaculture
  • parasitism, pathogenesis, predation, competition,
    exclusion and destruction of productive systems
    are all recorded most known from farming,
    horticulture and livestock production

Tall trees of Senna spectabilis from S. America
replacing native forest in Uganda
30
Invasiveness of an alien species
  • what makes a good invader?
  • rapid growth rate
  • great dispersal characteristics
  • large reproductive capacity
  • broad environmental tolerance
  • effective competitor with local species

Lianes in Seychelles
all invasive plants can be called weeds BUT not
all weeds are invasive species
31
current and future trends
  • human activities are changing natural ecosystems
    and making them more susceptible to IAS
  • globalisation
  • land-use change
  • climate change

32
invasives and climate change
  • climate change is upon us - although not exactly
    predictable in area or extent
  • climate change will make ecosystems more
    vulnerable to invasions
  • invasive species are already taking advantage
    of changed climatic conditions and expanding to
    the detriment of local species, habitats and
    ecosystems
  • thus we must be prepared for ecosystems affected
    by climate change to be further invaded and we
    must develop tools to predict and prevent these
    extra invasions

33
  • causes and effects of IAS are international or
    regional

IAS management and control supported by
bilateral, regional and global instruments and
guidance (see Modules 2 6)
34
emerging principles of IAS management
Convention on Biological Diversity 1992 (CBD)
Parties to prevent the introduction of, control
or eradicate those alien species which threaten
ecosystems, habitats or species (Art.8(h))
  • the precautionary principle
  • the principle of preventive action
  • the ecosystem approach
  • sharing of information
  • user-pays principle
  • cross-sectoral approach to management

35
Sharing of expertise and information is crucial
  • Types of information to be shared?
  • Inventories and databases
  • Incident lists and case studies
  • Potential threats to neighbouring countries
  • Information on taxonomy, ecology and genetics of
    IAS
  • Prevention and control methods where available
  • National and regional guidelines and measures
  • Many IAS databases accessible electronically

36
Some GISP products that can help
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