How Invasive Species Work

You're looking at the handiwork of an emerald ash borer beetle on a now dead ash tree from Michigan. The invasive beetles have killed tens of millions of ash trees across the U.S. and Canada.
Cornelia Schaible/Getty Images

In 2012, a group of annoying outsiders invaded the tranquil climes of Connecticut. They weren't New York City folks looking to build second homes but rather penny-sized bugs. Known as emerald ash borers, the iridescent beetles drilled holes and laid eggs in the ash trees so common in my home state. The insects killed thousands of trees by eating through them during each stage of their larval development [source:DEEP]。

State environmental officials tried in vain to stop the beetles from spreading by instituting measures such as quarantining the sale of firewood. Yet, ridding the state of the emerald ash borer was easier said than done. By July 2014, the beetle had spread into 38 Connecticut towns and five of its eight counties [source:DEEP]。The emerald ash borer, which came most recently from Michigan, is just one of severalunwanted speciesthat have stung Connecticut in recent years.

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Although I have yet to see an ash borer, I gird myself each summer for my annual battle against another outsider — the Japanese beetle. I bait several socklike traps every July and watch them fill up like so many colostomy bags with the corpses of the beetle. As one environmental official told me years ago, Japanese beetles, the gypsy moth and other nonnative plants and animals are called invasive for a reason: They just won't let go.

Invasive speciescan be any type of living organism, as well as its seeds or eggs, that isn't native to a particular ecosystem. When I lived on Lake George in the Adirondacks of New York, the alien species du jour was Eurasian watermilfoil, a plant from Europe and Asia. It grew from one small patch on the southern end of the lake all the way to its northern reaches, crowding out native plants, choking water systems, entangling boat propellers and making it difficult to swim or fish. A few miles away in nearby Lake Champlain, another invasive species, the lamprey eel, literally glommed on to fish, including salmon, sucking the lifeblood out of them [sources:Lake George Association,National Wildlife Federation]。

Whether plant, bug, fish or otherwise, invasive species come in all shapes and sizes. They're called variously alien species, exotic pests, nonindigenous species or nonnative animals, and they will not only wreck the environment but also destroy economies and make people sick, as the mosquitoes carrying West Nile virus do. They all grow and reproduce so quickly and aggressively that it is often hard to stop them [source:National Wildlife Federation]。

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Invasive species are nothing new. Nature has always transported plants and animals to where they weren't before. New Zealand, for example, brims with birds, plants and insects from Australia that floated on the winds that blew across the Tasman Sea. However, it wasn't until humans started introducing nonnative species into ecosystems that things got out of hand [sources:CISR,National Wildlife Federation]。

In the past, oceans, rivers, mountain ranges, deserts and other geographic features provided barriers that limited the spread of species from one place to another. We humans, with our cars, our boats and ourairplanes, have made these natural barriers meaningless. As a result, plant and animal species can move rather quickly from one area to another.

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Scientists estimate there are 50,000 nonnative species in the United States [source:CISR]。Some spread by swimming in ballast water or attaching to the bottoms of boats. That's how the zebra mussel entered the Great Lakes from Europe [sources:National Wildlife Federation]。贻贝是如此有弹性和入侵that they eat the food usually reserved for native species of fish. When they enter a body of water, they can clog water intake pipes and muscle out native species.

Invasive insects can move from area to area by boring into firewood, shipping pallets and other products. Sometimes humans release killer species into the environment on purpose. The ornamental plants we put in our gardens can sometimes escape into an ecosystem and take root where they weren't before. Hunters, fishermen and those in the pet trade often release nonnative animals for one reason or another. Just ask Floridians what they think of the nonnative Burmese python that is infesting the Everglades.Kudzuis another hallmark invasive species that humans let spread. It came to the United States from Japan during the 1876 Centennial Exposition. Americans used the leafy plant as an ornament, then as food for livestock. Today, kudzu is all over the place [sources:CISR,National Wildlife Federation]。

Once an invasive species such as kudzu is in an ecosystem,fuhgeddaboudit。It's here to stay for the most part. David Pimentel, a Cornell professor emeritus who has studied invasive species at length, estimates that they cost the United States between $100 and $200 billion in damages each year [source:Keim]。How? Like something out of a 1950s black-and-white horror movie, invasive species destroy, replace or crowd out native species in an ecosystem. Once kudzu, for instance, anchors its roots, it can overwhelm native plants, creating a monoculture. Some invasive species can alter the chemistry of soil, which could then fan the flames of wildfires

In 2011, the U.S. Department of the Interior spent $100 million on detecting, managing and controlling the aliens. The Massachusetts Department of Conservation and Recreation earmarked more than $25,000 just for reading material related to zebra mussel prevention. Eurasian watermilfoil, which we mentioned grows like no one's business in Lake George, Lake Champlain and other lakes, has reduced Vermont's lakefront property values by 16 percent. Moreover, U.S. farmers lose $13 billion each year in crops from invasive insects [source:U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service]。

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Prevention and Eradication of Invasive Species

Steve Tyscko holds a carp in Havana, Illinois, on March 11, 2011. Asian carp have spread from retention ponds in the southern U.S. to the Mississippi River to the Missouri and Illinois rivers to the Great Lakes.
© John Gress/Corbis

In the 1970s, fish farmers in the southern United States imported Asian carp to clean up the mess left by their catfish. One day, the carp made a break for it and escaped into the Mississippi River. In the 21st century, the Asian carp swims in the waters of at least 23 states, destroying the biodiversity in many bodies of water. How do you kill the fish? The U.S. Geological Survey has developed a poison. Some fishermen, however, go Rambo on them, shooting the fish with arrows as they jump out of the water. Others, however, are catching the carp and eating them. They say it tastes similar to tilapia [source:Kraft]。

Dealing with the Asian carp reflects the problems humans face when trying to control or eradicate an invasive species. You would think killing these pests would be an easy thing, considering that when a nonnative species enters a new ecosystem, only about 10 percent of the population will survive. Of those survivors, another 10 become pests [source:CISR]。That is, not all foreign species new to an area will become invasive. What's the problem?

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At first, all infestation is localized. In fact, it's so local that humans don't even know its occurring. Eventually, the species breeds and gradually moves into other areas. However, the climate has to be right, and conditions have to be perfect for an invasive species to take over an area. That means the area has to lack natural enemies, includingparasites, predators or pathogens. Some species, such as aphids, spread more easily than others because a male is not required for fertilization. By the time humans figure out an invasive species has taken over the area, it's much too late to do anything about it [source:CISR]。

We can try, can't we? Of course. There are two main ways of controlling an invasive species. The first is something researchers callproactive management。这意味着排除物种通过法律禁令ning certain animals, plants, food and other products from coming into a country. Officials can catch many invasive species by stepping up border inspections. Proactive management also means destroying an invasive population during the early stages of infestation. In California, environmental officials successfully beat back an invasive weed that occurs naturally in tropical waters. When state officials spotted the plant, they shrouded it with tarpaulins and poured chlorine on top, killing the weed before it had a chance to spread [source:CISR]。

The second way to control invasive species is throughreactive management。That could mean doing nothing, or it could mean controlling the invaders by limiting their capacity to reproduce. This might mean planting crops that are resistant to a plant disease. It could also mean planting during a time of the year when a pest is not around. We could also use chemicals to kill the pests or introduce a natural predator, such as a parasite or pathogen, into the ecosystem [source:CISR]。

What can you and I do? For one thing, go around your house and try to find any plants that don't belong there. Generally speaking, you can tell which plants are invasive if they crowd out the native vegetation. You can also go to thisU.S. Department of Agriculturewebsite and print out identification sheets. And please, don't flush baby alligators down the toilet or let a python wiggle out of the bedroom window. Grow only plants native to your area, and try not to move soil or wood great distances. We can keep our boats and fishing equipment clean, and notify custom officials anytime we travel overseas and decide to bring food, plants or animals into the country.

And please, no more kudzu or Eurasian watermilfoil.

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Author's Note: How Invasive Species Work

I got my first taste of what an alien species can do to the environment back in the mid-1980s when I worked in a one-person bureau for a daily newspaper in the Adirondacks of New York. One day Edmund Morette, one of the fish and game types who populated the area, walked into my office with a package wrapped in newspaper. He slammed the weighty paper on my desk and opened it. Inside was a 10-pound salmon. "Undie," I said, using his nickname, "what are you doing?" I was incredulous that he had brought a dead fish into my office. "Take a picture, John," he said, pointing to the suction marks on the salmon's body. Undie said a lamprey eel in Lake Champlain had taken hold of the fish and wouldn't let go. The eel killed the fish. I took the picture and spent the next several years writing about various invasive species that threatened the region.

Related Articles

  • Center for Invasive Species Research. "Invasive Species FAQs." (Aug. 20, 2014) http://cisr.ucr.edu/invasive_species_faqs.html#invasive%20species%20managed%20and%20controlled
  • 康涅狄格能源部和环境Protection. (DEEP) "Emerald Ash Borer." (Aug. 20, 2014) http://www.ct.gov/deep/cwp/view.asp?a=2697&q=464598&deepNav_GID=1631%20#what
  • Kaplan, Matt. "Alien birds may be last hope for Hawaiian Plants." Nature. Sept. 28, 2007. (Aug. 29, 2014) http://www.nature.com/news/2007/070928/full/news070924-12.html
  • Keim, Brandon. "Ecologists: Time to End Invasive-Species Persecution." Wired.com. June 8, 2011. (Aug. 29, 2014) http://www.wired.com/2011/06/species-persecution/
  • Kraft, Amy. "Five Ways to Stop Asian Carp." Popular Science. April 29, 2013. (Aug. 21, 2014) http://www.popsci.com/science/article/2013-04/five-ways-stop-asian-carp
  • Lake George Association. "Eurasian Watermilfoil in Lake George." (Aug. 20, 2014) http://www.lakegeorgeassociation.org/what-we-do/Invasive-Species/Eurasian-Watermilfoil.asp
  • National Wildlife Federation. "Invasive Species." (Aug. 20, 2014) http://www.nwf.org/Wildlife/Threats-to-Wildlife/Invasive-Species.aspx
  • University of Kentucky. "Species Invasion." (Aug. 21, 2014) http://www.uky.edu/Ag/Forestry/conbio09/Lecture11.pdf
  • U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. "The Cost of Invasive Species." January 2012. (Aug. 29, 2014)http://www.fws.gov/verobeach/PythonPDF/CostofInvasivesFactSheet.pdf

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