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Invasive Alien Species

Kartavya Desk Staff

Source: TH

Context: A new study published in Nature Ecology & Evolution has revealed that India is massively underestimating the economic cost of invasive alien species, with management costs underreported by over 1.16 billion percent — the highest global discrepancy.

About Invasive Alien Species (IAS)

What it is?

• As per the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and Indian law, an invasive alien species is a non-native organism whose introduction and spread threaten biodiversity, ecosystem services, or human well-being.

• The Indian National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) defines them as species outside their natural range that establish and proliferate, causing ecological or economic harm.

Characteristics of IAS

High adaptability – thrive in disturbed or new ecosystems.

Aggressive growth – outcompete native species for light, water, and nutrients.

Reproductive advantage – rapid breeding or vegetative propagation.

Absence of predators – flourish unchecked in new habitats.

Economic and ecological impact – alter soil chemistry, hydrology, and crop yields.

Global Impact

• Global cost of invasive species since 1960 exceeds $2.2 trillion.

• Non-native plants account for the highest management cost ($926 billion).

• Arthropods ($830 billion) and mammals ($263 billion) follow.

• Europe reported the highest cost ($1.5 trillion).

India’s Case

Lantana camara, Parthenium hysterophorus, Prosopis juliflora, and Water Hyacinth dominate forests, rangelands, and wetlands.

• Large swathes of Bandipur, Mudumalai, and other reserves are overrun by lantana.

• Agriculture suffers due to weeds like parthenium reducing crop yields.

• Aquatic invasives clog waterways, impacting irrigation and fisheries.

Threats Posed

Biodiversity loss – displacement of native flora and fauna.

Agricultural losses – reduced productivity and higher input costs.

Health hazards – allergenic weeds cause respiratory and skin diseases.

Forest fire risks – highly combustible species like lantana increase wildfire incidents.

Economic drain – hidden management costs undermine development goals.

Initiatives for Management

National Biodiversity Action Plan (NBAP) emphasises IAS management.

Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD), 1992 – India is a party and obligated to control IAS.

National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) – coordinates IAS prevention and awareness.

Ballast Water Management Convention – to prevent marine invasions.

State-level eradication drives – manual removal, biocontrol measures, controlled grazing, and afforestation.

AI-assisted content, editorially reviewed by Kartavya Desk Staff.

About Kartavya Desk Staff

Articles in our archive published before our editorial team was expanded. Legacy content is periodically reviewed and updated by our current editors.

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