Arab Times

Follow people to track the ‘invasive’ species

Populated areas ‘hotspots’

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PARIS, June 13, (AFP): Islands and populated coastal areas are the world’s “hotspots” for invasive species, which can upend entire ecosystems and drive local animals and plants to extinction, a study reported Monday.

The first global census of non-native fauna and flora found the highest concentrat­ions in Hawaii, New Zealand’s North Island, and the Lesser Sunda Islands of Indonesia.

The 50th US state is beset with alien species — including rats, feral pigs, and the firetree, which crowds out indigenous plants — in each of eight categories that include reptiles, fish, ants, spiders, mammals and amphibians.

Disease-bearing mosquitos that arrived in the early 19th century have wiped out half the island chain’s tropical birds, with several other species on the brink.

Florida is the top hotspot among mainland regions, boasting a rogues’ gallery of invaders: walking catfish, giant iguanas, mammal-crushing pythons, and monster African land snails that gobble up native plants and carry a parasite that causes meningitis in humans.

The California coast and northern Australia are also rife with uninvited guests.

The new map of intruder species points unmistakab­ly to how they got there, said Wayne Dawson, a biologist at Durham University in northeaste­rn England and lead author of the study published in Nature Ecology and Evolution.

“We have shown that regions with higher human population density, and greater wealth, have more establishe­d alien species,” he told AFP.

Dawson

Root

Not all living things that take root in foreign soils or waters cause harm.

But those that do are among the main drivers — along with habitat loss, hunting for food, pollution and climate change — of wildlife decline around the world, experts say.

Creatures that have evolved in isolation may find themselves helpless against unfamiliar predators or pathogens.

Forests in Guam are eerily silent, for example, because the brown tree snake has devoured most of the island’s birds (or their eggs) over the last half century.

Newcomers often marginalis­e native species: Asian carp now dominate some US rivers, grey squirrels have replaced red ones in London parks, and kudzu (aka Japanese arrowroot) — a perennial vine introduced to the US 150 years ago as an ornamental bush — has crowded out many plants.

Benign or not, the overwhelmi­ng majority of invasive species are brought to new places by humans.

Sometimes it happens on purpose, for pest control. But attempts to engineer nature can backfire.

Plantation owners in Hawaii imported mongooses to eat the rats that had infested sugar cane fields. But rats are nocturnal, and thus continued to thrive. The diurnal mongooses ate ground-nesting birds instead.

More often, invasive critters spread by hitching rides with cargo. The deadly Asian hornet is thought to have landed in Europe a dozen years ago in a shipment of pottery from China.

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