The Pacific
is biologically unique, as its isolated islands provide ideal conditions
for the evolution of new species. Thus, Pacific islands have high
numbers of “endemic” species - species that are restricted
to only one or a few islands and found nowhere else in the world.
The population
of many of these species is naturally very small in the islands,
making them extremely vulnerable to disturbance.
While one of
the key threats to species and ecosystems globally is land clearing
or habitat loss, invasive species often pose an even greater risk for islands.
What
is an invasive species?
Some species
arrived naturally on islands, such as by flying or floating there,
or by being carried as seeds by birds. These are “native” species,
and they arrived gradually, over millions of years, after islands
emerged from the sea. Rates of arrival of native species are very
slow - often in the order of one species every 10,000 years. Since
the arrival of humans on Pacific islands, other species have been
carried there by people, either deliberately (as food, timber,
or ornamentals) or accidentally (such as insect pests). These are “introduced” species,
sometimes also called “alien” or “exotic” or “non-native” species.
The rate of introduction of introduced species is much faster than
the natural rate of arrival of native species - typically more
than one species per year, or 10,000 times the natural rate. Many
introduced species are useful, and most of them do not cause serious
environmental problems. However, some of them get out of control
and can cause enormous ecological, economic or health problems.
These are called “invasive” species, also known as “pest” species.
Invasive species
are usually highly adaptable. They can live in a wide range of
environments. They breed fast, spread easily, and quickly become
widespread. When they arrive in a new country, they have usually
left the diseases and predators that would have kept their numbers
under control back in their home country.
Invasive species
can come from any group of living things, including plants, rats,
mongooses,
ants, snails, mosquitoes and disease agents. There are also
invasive birds such as mynas, and invasive aquatic species, both freshwater
and marine.
Effects
of invasive species
Invasive species
threaten many species with extinction. They interfere with ecosystems
and change the way these function. They have negative impacts on
the resources people rely on to live - food, clean water, and shelter.
They carry diseases and can directly harm humans. They can impact
on species we rely on for our livelihoods, such as crops and farm
animals. Some of them even damage buildings, bridges and other
structures, or can reduce the tourist potential of an area by damaging
the environment and other attractions. They obviously can have
a great impact on Pacific islanders’ traditional activities
and modern livelihoods.
A full 90% of
all animals that have become extinct since 1800 were island birds,
and of these 90% fell victim to invasive species. Many endemic
bird species are in trouble in the Pacific, some directly threatened
by predators such as rats, cats and mongooses, others threatened
indirectly by habitat and food losses caused by invasive trees
or vines.
Regardless of
where we live, invasive species can impact on us all. Every Pacific
country has invasive species that cause problems and is at risk
of getting new ones.
How
do they arrive and spread?
Some invasives
were introduced deliberately by people as food, or for medicinal
or other uses, and some are introduced as pets or ornamental plants.
A few species, such as mongooses, have been deliberately introduced
in attempts to control other invasive pests.
Among the many
accidental introductions, plant pests, ants and diseases have been
introduced to many islands as contaminants of fruits, vegetables,
soil, plants, timber and commercial feed, while others arrive in
cargo. Invasives can be carried in cars, on military equipment
or used machinery, in personal effects such as hiking boots and
camping equipment, or in the ballast water of ships or clinging
to ship’s hulls.
The rate of
accidental introductions is increasing, as there is more movement
of people and goods around the region. Quarantine often exists
at international borders of countries but not between islands within
a country. Increased movement increases the risk of invasion of
new islands.
What
can we do about them?
1. Prevention
is the best solution - it is cheaper and usually easier to keep
something out than to treat an established pest. It is also more
effective at preventing impacts - excluding a pest results in no
impacts of it. So exclusion by quarantine is the first line of
defence.
2. Eradication.
However, once a species has reached an island it must be managed.
The best option for managing an established invasive species is
to eradicate it entirely from an island. This can often be done
if the species is detected quickly enough after it arrives, or
before it has spread very widely. The advantages of eradication
are that it eliminates the impact entirely and management costs
are minimal once the pest has been eradicated (only monitoring
and quarantine to prevent re-invasion). 3. Containment or exclusion means preventing the pest from spreading out of or
into a defined area. This can be used to keep important (but invasive)
crop species from escaping from farmland, or to keep invasives
from spreading into nature reserves or other natural areas.
4. Site-specific
control means keeping the pest’s population below a certain
level in defined areas, such as reserves or other natural areas.
5. Biological
control means introducing a natural enemy of the pest, such as
a predator or disease of it, to control its population. Poorly
planned biocontrol, such as introducing organisms that attack a
wide range of prey or hosts, has caused enormous problems on some
islands, but properly researched biocontrol, using carefully selected
agents that attack only the target species, can sometimes bring
serious pests under control without causing additional problems.
An advantage of biocontrol is that once established, the control
agent often maintains itself, and no further cost is incurred.
SPREP’s
work on invasives
The Pacific
is a leader in using a regional approach to address invasive species.
The 2000 Draft Regional Invasive Species Strategy, developed by
SPREP at the request of and with the collaboration of its member
countries, was the first regional strategy of its kind in the world.
This was updated
and revised in 2008 as new Guidelines for Invasive Species Management
in the Pacific which provides a guide to the activities that need
to be implemented regionally and in individual countries and territories,
in order to achieve comprehensive and integrated invasive species
management throughout the Pacific. It forms the strategy for the
Invasive Species Working Group of the Roundtable for Nature Conservation
in the Pacific Islands, serving to coordinate action by agencies
across the region.
Coordination
is a large part of SPREP’s role, and SPREP shares with SPC
a regional mandate to lead invasive species planning and technical
assistance in the Pacific. SPREP is a member of the steering committee
of the Pacific Invasives Learning Network (PILN) and the Pacific
Invasives Initiative (PII) , and hosts the PILN Coordinator. |