100 of the World's Worst Invasive Alien Species 93
Ant writes "100 of the World's Worst Invasive Alien Species list says: 'Invasive species have been recognised globally as a major threat to biodiversity (the collected wealth of the world's species of plants, animals and other organisms) as well as to agriculture and other human interests. It is very difficult to choose 100 invasive species, from around the world, that really are "worse" than any others. Species and their interactions with ecosystems are very complex. Some species may have invaded only a restricted region, but have a huge probability of expanding, and causing further great damage (e.g. see Boiga irregularis: the brown tree snake). Other species may already be globally widespread, and causing cumulative but less visible damage. Many biological families or genera contain large numbers of invasive species, often with similar impacts; in these cases one representative species was chosen. The one hundred species aim to collectively illustrate the range of impacts caused by biological invasion.'"
It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:5, Insightful)
First Post!
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:3, Insightful)
Some place?! Not only should we be #1 on that list, we are the ones responsible for everything on that list being there. It's not like they all decided to be invasive and just hopped on an airplane.
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:3, Insightful)
its called evolution and survival of the fittest. the only good reason to have a list like this is if these are pests messing with the
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:1, Informative)
Example of human fuckery (a bad thing): Kudzu [ua.edu].
Read up on both and tell me that the latter is a simple matter of "survival of the fittest".
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:2, Informative)
positive things your article mentions:
-- it has sweet smelling blossoms so people planted it because they liked it
-- during the great depression the soil conservation service used kudzu for erosion control.
-- people have "raised Angora goats in fields of kudzu which would o
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:3, Insightful)
True enough, I'm not one of those who thinks that the world needs to be locked in stasis. Nature evolves constantly and it's changing now in response to us. Sadly, many people seem to think that they somehow exist outside "nature" just because they can't see it out the window of their SUV. Does it really matter if it's one species of Lady-bu
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:2)
What people seem to forget is that although we are good at adapting, the new state of things may require a far smaller population. Humans have always played with ecological fire, so to speak. Sometimes we get burnt badly. I think that eventually we will stuff up and get a mighty kick up the arse from nature, we'll probably survive as a species but that doesn't mean things will be pleasant.
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:2, Informative)
Pre-historically this would occur much slower, so native species would evolve to compete with the invaders.
the only good reason to have a list like this is if these are pests messing with the economy. otherwise who cares?
I care. I care because I battle those d---ed tiger mosquitos regularly. Also, if you look at the list, many of them are economically harmful.
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:1)
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:1)
i agree that dutch elm was terrible. it destroyed a whole industry. my point is that its not like "nature" is worse off because of it. (after all we may have lost the elm tree but we got kudzu from japan.) this kind of thing happens in nature naturally all the time.
what if the invasive species is a human parasite
are you accusing me
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:3, Informative)
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:2)
Species have invaded the ranges of others many, many times during the history of life on Earth. What humans are guilty of isn't allowing
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:2)
We're not alien, everything else is!
Re:It seems we would be on top of the list. (Score:2, Funny)
Suggested additions: (Score:3, Funny)
2. Starbucks
3. Talk Shows
4. Neoconservatives
5. "Alternative" Bands
6. Cell-Phone-Talking SUV Drivers
Re:No "seems" about it (Score:1)
Interesting list... (Score:4, Insightful)
-Adam
Re:Interesting list... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Interesting list... (Score:2, Informative)
>I imagine they are so high on the list because of their numbers, and few people think of them in this way.
no, it's because when they go feral they kill fucking everything.
You obviously read the article, but didn't go to the effort of trying to comprehend the explanatory paragraph.
Re:Interesting list... (Score:2)
Either that or, perhaps, just perhaps, being the single greatest natural hunters of thier size plays some small part.
Re:Interesting list... (Score:3, Funny)
Ever have a cat in a small apartment? Mine's been trying to crack my password for 4 years now! (Fortuantely he thinks it's 255 characters long.)
Re:Interesting list... (Score:3, Interesting)
Back in the day (c. 1987) a friend (Jenny) was working on another friend's (Bill) computer writing her paper. Bill had cats named Jeremy and Silver. While Jenny was writing the paper in WordStar, Silver walked across the keyboard and managed to close the program without saving, which if I recall was Ctrl-K, X with maybe an N necessary to answer "Do you want your cat to destroy your work?"
Being the good old DOS days however, Bil
Re:Interesting list... (Score:1)
Wouldn't that reason make more sense voting for Kerry? What with the House and Senate presumably remaining in Republican hands, he would be a frustrated president much of the time.
Re:Interesting list... (Score:2, Insightful)
Silly me, I thought the list was alphabetically sorted. What a coincidence!!
Re:Interesting list... (Score:2)
Re:Interesting list... (Score:2)
Another one that struck me funny was #17, goats. We use goat
Re:Interesting list... (Score:2)
Ate 3 red shirts right off the line
Bill took a stick, gave him a whack,
And tied him to the railroad track.
The whistle blew, the train grew nigh.
Bill Grogan's goat was doomed to die.
He gave three groans, three groans of pain
Coughed up the shirts and flagged the train!
and the winner is (Score:1, Funny)
Terror in Maryland (Score:2, Interesting)
I for one (Score:1, Funny)
Re:I for one (Score:1)
I for one welcome our . . . Overlords.
Enough already.
-> Fritz
Re:I for one (Score:3, Funny)
#63: Rainbow Trout? (Score:3, Funny)
That would be nice...
My Criterion: Does it taste good? (Score:2)
So will they remove all limits on Rainbow Trout now?
Reminds me of a recent story about flathead catfish:
As long as it tastes better than the species it
What about... (Score:2, Funny)
Forgot one (Score:5, Insightful)
1) Homo Sapiens [wikipedia.org]
To quote the entry: "few single species occupy as many diverse environments as humans"
Re:Forgot one (Score:1)
Re:Forgot one (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Forgot one (Score:3, Interesting)
It always pisses me off when people live in some fantasyland where "nature" is always in perfect harmony and humans no nothing but upset it.
Extinctions, invasions and wild changes in the biosphere are intrinsic in nature. Humans are not somehow "outside of it". We are part of it and there is no valid ethical argument saying we should not strive to survive just like every other lifeform out there.
This may not have been the intent of the parent post but I've h
Re:Forgot one (Score:2)
Re:Forgot one (Score:2)
Humans need to look out for humans. part of that is interacting and engineering the environment to suit us. poisoning water and crippling biospheres ar
Can't have it both ways (Score:2)
It always pisses me off when people live in some fantasyland where "nature" is always in perfect harmony and humans no nothing but upset it.
And it always pisses me off that the same people who make this argument use it to justify human greed-induced environmental degradation.
Every time someone points out that we're crapping in our own nest someone else trots this line out to make the claim that we have the right because we're products of nature ourselves. It's a two-faced argument because we do everyth
Re:Can't have it both ways (Score:2)
If you read what I wrote, I'm not an advocate of "crapping in our own nest". Doing something that hurts the survival of the human species is immoral. Killing other people and disrupting an ecosystem to the point where human life is negatively impacted both count as immoral in my book.
I fail to see how you make the logical step from "we live in houses,
Re:Can't have it both ways (Score:2)
Nature prescribes no bounds aside from the laws of physics.
Perhaps I should be more specific...Earth's natural ecosystem proscribes boundaries that we thumb our noses at when we choose to use massive quantities of resources to achieve some kind of imaginary utopia of technological isolation from the limits of our physical existence.
Every known living thing consumes energy and produces waste.
Only as necessary for its survival.
The fact that we do too is not inherently immoral. The degree to which
the worst are (Score:1, Insightful)
Why aren't... (Score:3, Funny)
It might be millions years between incursions, but the effect they have on the biosphere is pretty dramatic.
Mass extinctions, tectonic plate shifts, pole shifts, axis shifts, etc, etc, etc.
Meep (Score:2)
Adding to the Chorus (Score:1)
Let me put it this way: If humans had not been around, how many of the species on that list would still be invasive?
~UP
myna bird? (Score:1)
Re:myna bird? (Score:2)
Loveliness != good for the environment!
Re:myna bird? (Score:2)
Strange.
Re:myna bird? (Score:2, Informative)
Wow! There are no flies on you are there? (are flies on the list?) Why didn't they say that? All they say by way of methodology is "It is very difficult to choose 100 invasive species, from around the world,
Loveliness != good for the environment!
The indictment htt [issg.org]
Trees are invasive? (Score:2)
I granted don't know much about invasive species, but this list seems a bit odd in its priorities.
Re:Trees are invasive? (Score:2, Interesting)
The point is, tree's are exceptionally good at biological warfare. A non-native tree in a distant land, with no competitors, can utterly decimate local species.
Sorta like Americans in Baghdad, but I digress..
Re:Trees are invasive? (Score:2)
Also, i would imagine that the point is not "most invasive species that we cannot handle." Rather, which species (left to their own) are the most effective at invading a new area and dom
Oh yes. (Score:4, Informative)
This plant is a huge success of natural selection. It can survive in all sorts of environments, and scales wonderfully eeking a survival in the middle of the desert as a shrub or thrive in wet forest as a tree, but always leeching every and all the resources available to it. It has an extensive root system which soaks up all the water available, which not only chokes off local trees, but prevents ground water from replenishing streams and aquifers, hurting the ecology of the entire region. It is near worthless as a source of food for animals, unlike the plants which it displaces.
Getting rid of it is not quite as easy as using a chainsaw. As I mentioned, it has an extensive root system which survives and resprouts after the above-ground portion of the plant has been cut down. The salt ceder also salinates the soil, making harder for other plants to regrow if the infestation has been there a long time before removal. Most places resort to pesticide to get rid of it, either by spraying areas that are completely infested, or by poisoning the trunks of individual trees that have been cut down. Also, "just chainsawing it", is not as easy as it sounds. It is an extremely time consuming task. Likewise, pesticides are not something that you want to go overboard with. In general these trees have been spreading over decades and we are just now getting around to dealing with them, so you don't want to just rip out all the salt cedars as fast as possible without a plan for reintroducing native plants.
Here in New Mexico, the salt cedar is concidered to be one of the greatest threats to our water supply, and a great deal of effort is being made to eradicate it, and progress is being made, but it is necisarrily slow.
Re:Oh yes. (Score:2)
Here in Colorado the salt cedar is widely known as tamarisk, and its principle impact is its effect on the water supply. Tamarisk along rivers and streams uses enormously more water than the native species it displaces. The best estimates are that the increas
And here's another one (Score:3, Informative)
native ladybirds, and eat the eggs of butterflies
and lacewings.
They also blemish soft fruits and their acrid defensive chemicals taint wines.
Harmonia axyridis - the Harlequin Ladybird
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/england/essex/3715120.
#93, possums (Score:2)
Same country has just removed its' moratorium on genetically engineered crops - it seems we, as a nation, will never bloody learn.
Dave
Re:#93, possums (Score:1)
I echo your frustrations, Dave. It's frustrating to watch your country (in my case, the USA) dive head first into something as potentially catastropic as genetic engineering without much resistance from our elected officials.
The smell of money sure intoxicates the body politic, doesn't it? Man, it's frustrating.
Re:#93, possums (Score:1)
Yeah, genetical engineering is so dangerous. We have only 2000 years of expierince with it and see what catastrophes happened because of it. Thank your fucking deity that you life in a part of the world where planting, raising and harvesting food crops is the easiest thing to do.
Re:#93, possums (Score:2, Insightful)
It seems I've touched on a volatile issue here. Please consider this elaboration. Hopefully it will show you that I do consider my thoughts carefully.
With every technological innovation there are consequences. Coal power produced pollution the likes of which had never been seen before; the proliferation of the automobile has contributed greatly to increased greenhouse emissions; and genetically modified foods have been met with great skepticism is most industrialized nations ... America being a noteworthy
Re:#93, possums (Score:1)
genetic engineering (Score:2)
Agriculture plays a major role in NZ's economy. And "New Zealand" is an established "brand" recognized for being clean/unspoiled/uncontaminated. Turning away US nuclear power ships and all that.
If you guys remain GM free, then _when_ (not if) someone in the rest of the world screws up, you guys stand to make a big profit.
Look at the state of "British Beef". They're going nowhere. . The only beef I'd think is 99.99% safe to e
Re:#93, possums (Score:2)
An adult possum is one of the ugliest creatures in creation. A possum-fur coat would only feel at home on the shoulders of Mad Max. Whose idea was it to breed them for fur?
Re:#93, possums (Score:2)
Dave
The trouble with species introduction (Score:3, Insightful)
Great article. Thanks Ant.
Introduced species brought in to stimulate this (profit) or eradicate that ("pests"), have brought about consequences to our generation and those after us, the obvious one being the trampling and eradication of native species that have adapted to their particular region over many generations -- key players in that area's natural system. These are being dominated by "foreigners" -- many of which have made the list -- often with consequences that may not be discovered for many years.
I have family in Hawai'i, and anyone who's flown to or from Honolulu Int'l knows how strict the authorities are there. Fragile, geologically young, natural systems are especially at risk for species introduction, as evidenced by the mongoose (brought in to eradicate another species), as one example. The mongoose has seriously threatened the native bird populations on Oahu and many neighbor islands.
It's fun to tackle serious issues with a touch of humor. Make no mistake, though. This is a very serious issue that is being taken very seriously, especially by those fragile island regions most threatened by these invasions, and even by geologically older regions dealing with invasive ivys and other (introduced) pests that cost money to deal with.
Re:The trouble with species introduction (Score:2)
Re:The trouble with species introduction (Score:2)
Best story about mongoose being introduced into Hawaii - they were introduced to control the rat population.
One problem: rats are nocturnal (night-dwellers). Mongoose (at least the kind introduced to Hawaii) are diurnal (day-dwellers). The two species barely ever saw each other.
Yah, humans are smart.
Greys! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Greys! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Greys! (Score:2)
rhododendrons certainly do well is certain soils, but I have never seen them take over a forest.
The Simpsons speak to us about everything... (Score:3)
Lisa: But isn't that a bit short-sighted? What happens when we're overrun by lizards?
Skinner: No problem. We simply release wave after wave of Chinese needle snakes. They'll wipe out the lizards.
Lisa: But aren't the snakes even worse?
Skinner: Yes, but we're prepared for that. We've lined up a fabulous type of gorilla that thrives on snake meat.
Lisa: But then we're stuck with gorillas!
Skinner: No, that's the beautiful part. When wintertime rolls around, the gorillas simply freeze to death.
Re:The Simpsons speak to us about everything... (Score:2)
star thistle; a problem locally (Score:2)
California Native Plant Society [cnps.org] has a pretty good list of weed sites as well. I never knew how much you see growing in the countryside was a product of an invasion.
PSA - The list is alphabetical (Score:1)
You should take issue with the people who invented the alphabet, since they're the ones who put 'c' before 'd' and 'r'.
my nominations for worst invading alien species: (Score:1)
(2) Martians
(3) Aliens
(4) Body Snatchers
(5) Kang & Kodos
(6) Marvin the Martian
(7) Mechagodzilla
(8) Silastic Armorfiends
(9) Young Republicans
(10) Brain Leeches of Carotene Beta
List is alphabetical (Score:4, Informative)
Shortsighted humans... (Score:3, Interesting)
When you release beetles to consume aphids, for instance, it is a bad assumption to think that the beetles will take care of the aphid problem, and then having exhausted their food source, will then simply die off or dwindle to an acceptable-to-humans number- more likely, they'll choose alternate food sources, which may include things humans did not intend for them to eat. I'm certainly not the sort to suggest that all human modification of the environment is awful and we must leave all of nature pristine- for one thing, it's not as though animals and plants themselves leave nature unspoiled. Also, in certain cases like food crops and game animals, invasive species have been extremely beneficial to humans. While they might have made the list here, I think many humans are perfectly fine with lakes and rivers brimming with largemouth bass and trout. In the same way, while "invasive," and sometimes even destructive, few humans would put the domestic cat on the same level of infamy as Dutch elm disease, kudzu, or fire ants- in fact, they've traditionally been valued for controlling populations of two of the other members on the list. But, we must remember that animals and plants are not machines that can be operated to do the will of humanity- however much we may think ourselves their masters, at a higher level they obey their genes. And their genes want them to reproduce without limit.
On the subject of deliberately introduced invasive species, this entry sounds like a truly amazing creature:
The predatory "rosy wolf snail" (also known as the "cannibal snail") is native to the south-eastern United States, especially Florida. It has been introduced to islands in the Pacific and Indian Oceans, also to Bermuda and the Bahamas, as a putative biological control agent for another alien species, the giant African snail (Achatina fulica). There is no good evidence that control of A. fulica has been effected, but E. rosea has caused the extinction of numerous endemic partulid tree snails in French Polynesia and has been heavily implicated in the extinction or at least decline of other species of snails wherever it has been introduced, notably in Hawaii. Common Names: cannibal snail, Rosige Wolfsschnecke, rosy wolf snail
I mean, I just would like to see this thing in action- you tend to think of most predatory animals as made for pursuit, capable of bursts of speed to chase down prey. Then you have this snail....
My favourite name out of these is definately... (Score:2)
A native of the Indian sub-continent, this rat has now spread throughout the world. It will feed on and damage almost any edible thing. Ship rats are widespread in forest and woodlands as well as being able to live in and around buildings. A very agile rat, it often frequents the tree tops searching for food and nesting there in bunches of leaves and twigs.
Common Names: Black rat, black rat, blue rat, bush rat, European house rat, Hausratte, roof rat, ship rat
Common, Rattus
Re:My favourite name out of these is definately... (Score:1)