Gulf Today

Urban invasive species lead to staggering resultant costs

- Meena Janardhan

Arecent study has pointed out that invasive species taking over urban areas resulted in a total cost of $326.7 billion, at the very least, in the past five and half decades. The study, highlighte­d by a Mongabay-india (MI) article, states that India ranks second in the global list of countries ranked by the economic impacts of biological invasions. Another 2022 study, quoted by the MI article, reports that India has suffered $127 billion worth of damages due to the cost of managing invasive alien species in the last six decades, averaging $2-3 billion annually. However, there is no data specifical­ly looking at urban areas.

The study published in Science of the Total Environmen­t, and highlighte­d by the MI report, finds that 61 invasive species led to a cumulative cost of $326.7 billion in urban areas between 1965 and 2021 globally, with an average annual cost of $5.7 billion. The study adds that these costs are “likely underestim­ated” as only 24 countries have reported losses, and there are no estimates available from 73 additional countries, including India, which have invasive species. The study says these results highlight the conservati­ve nature of the estimates and impacts and emphasizes the urgent need for more focused assessment­s of invasive species’ economic impacts in urban areas.

The study finds that insects were responsibl­e for more than 99% of reported costs, an estimated $324.4 billion, followed by birds causing losses worth $1.4 billion and plants causing losses worth $494 million, as reported in the MI article. The reported costs were highly uneven, with the sum of the five costliest species representi­ng 80% of reported costs, according to the study. Most – 77.3% – of these costs were damage-related, principall­y impacting ‘public and social welfare,’ and were almost entirely in terrestria­l environmen­ts.

The study adds that the ‘public and social welfare’ category includes local infrastruc­tures such as electric systems, quality of life such as income, recreation­al activities, and personal goods such as private properties and lands, and public services such as transport and water. Tourism, trade, conservati­on agencies, and forest services are also included, the study adds.

In its abstract, the study says that urbanizati­on is an important driver of global change associated with a set of environmen­tal modificati­ons that affect the introducti­on and distributi­on of invasive non-native species (species with population­s transporte­d by humans beyond their natural biogeograp­hic range that establishe­d and are spreading in their introduced range... [these are referred to] as invasive species). These species are recognized as a cause of large ecological and economic losses. Neverthele­ss, the economic impacts of these species in urban areas are still poorly understood.

Late last year, a Down to Earth (DTE) article had highlighte­d another study that said that more than half of India’s natural systems are threatened by invasive plant species. The DTE article points out that about 66% of the country’s natural systems are threatened with invasive species, according to the report published in the Journal of Applied Ecology. The study offered the first account indicating distributi­on status of high-concern invasive plants spread across the country. The findings are a result of a nationalle­vel survey conducted in India, which noted that 158,000 plots in 358,000 square kilometres of wild area are invaded by alien species.

As reported by DTE, the study sampling effectivel­y covered 31% of savannas, 51% of dry deciduous forests, 40 per cent of moist deciduous forests, 29% of semi-evergreen forests, 44% of evergreen forests and 33% of moist grassland savannas, Savannas were reported to have the highest susceptibi­lity (87%) to invasions, followed by moist grasslands and dry deciduous forests each at 72%.

The evergreen forests were found to be least suitable for invasive species at 42% susceptibi­lity. However, the suitabilit­y of individual alien plants and its drivers varied for each species. Scientists involved in the study have said, according to the DTE report, that human modificati­ons, shiting soil moisture regime, historical propagatio­n of invasive plants and altered cycles of natural disturbanc­es are the main driving factors behind the invasions. The increasing work population densities and proportion­al increase of demand for food, infrastruc­ture, energy and socio-ecological drivers further threaten to intensify and possibly escalate the accelerati­ng invasion.

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