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Alien Species
Alien Species
"Alien species" means, with respect
to a particular ecosystem, any species, including its seeds, eggs,
spores, or other biological material capable of propagating that
species, that is not native to that ecosystem.
From Executive
Order 13112 of February 3, 1999 establishing the National Invasive
Species Council.
Many alien species are welcome additions to the landscape.
- Most garden plants are not natives.
- Wheat, apricots, apples, peaches, oats, cabbage and many other foods
are not native to North America.
- Tomatoes, potatoes, avocados, and chocolate are not native to Europe
or Africa.
- Horses, dogs, cats, and cattle are not native to North America. (Well,
horses were native millions of years ago, but those horses became extinct.)
But some alien species are not wanted. They are the invasive species.
Invasive Species
"Invasive species" means an alien
species whose introduction does or is likely to cause economic or
environmental harm or harm to human health.
From Executive
Order 13112 of February 3, 1999 establishing the National Invasive
Species Council.
Alien species are sometimes also referred to as exotic, non-native,
introduced, nuisance and non-indigenous species.
From GulfBase.org.
Invasive species are perhaps the most important environmental problem
along many coasts. Fortunately, they are not yet an important problem
in the Gulf of Mexico. See the US
Government Interagency gateway to Invasive Species.
How Do Invasive Species Succeed?
Successful alien fish are species that are ecological generalists
that "grew relatively faster, tolerated wider ranges of temperature
and salinity, and were more likely to have a history of invasiveness than
were fishes [that failed to invade successfully]."
Kolar & Lodge (2002).
What Are the Important Invasive Species?
- The Nonindigenous Species Database Network NISbase provides
links to information about invasive species.
- The World Conservation Union's Invasive Species Specialist Group
maintains a global
database and a list of the 100
worst alien species worldwide, including land plants and animals.
- The World Conservation Union's Invasive
Species Specialist Group lists the 100
worst alien species worldwide, including land plants and animals.
- The US Geological Survey maintains
a list of Non indigenous Aquatic
Species and
alien species in San
Francisco bay.
- The University of Hawaii's Botany
Department lists the important alien
marine species of Hawaii.
- Gulf States Marine Fisheries Commission maintains a list of Non-Native
Aquatic Species in the Gulf of Mexico and South Atlantic Regions.
The important species include Green
Mussels, Zebra
Mussels, which has recently reached the gulf, Pacific
white shrimp, the Tessellated
blenny, and the Taura
Virus of farmed shrimp, which may escape into the gulf. Full
details are in their Gulf
of Mexico Regional Panel 2002 Annual Report.
In Hawaii, the spread of invasive algae has washed ashore and formed
stinking piles that have driven off tourists.
GARY T. KUBOTA / GKUBOTA@STARBULLETIN.COM
Left: Researcher Jennifer Smith displays the
green seaweed (a green algae Cladophora sericea) that is plaguing
a section of the coastline in West Maui. Residents and visitors have complained
about the foul odor and murky diving conditions.
From Hawaii Star Bulletin.
Right: The parasitic isopod Orthione griffenis,
which likely was introduced to the West Coast via ship ballast water, infests
native mud shrimp and can be identified by its bulging carapace. Click on the
image for a zoom. (Courtesy of Brett Dumbauld)
From Oregon
State University New Invasive Parasite
How Do Invasive Marine Species Spread?
- Aquaculture. The Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that
39% of new, alien, aquatic species are introduced for aquaculture. Aquaculture
was the main reason for the deliberate movement of aquatic species
across national borders.–FAO
Most aquaculturists are careful not to
release exotics into new environments. However, unintentional releases
do occur. In the Northwest, Atlantic salmon have escaped through
holes in net pens, and have been captured by commercial fishermen.
There is concern that they may compete for food or nesting sites
with native Pacific salmon.
From MIT
Sea Grant Center for Coastal Resources.
The Caulpera taxifolia species described below was apparently inadvertently
released into the Mediterranean Sea by the Oceanographic Museum at
Monaco, although they insist the plant did not come from the museum.
- Marine
Trash.This article and the original
paper in Nature by David Barnes (2002) describes the great increase
in the number of marine organisms transported to new regions on marine
trash, especially plastics.
[He] estimate[s] that rubbish of human
origin in the sea has roughly doubled the propagation of fauna
in the subtropics and more than tripled it at high (> 50°)
latitudes, increasing the potential for alien invasion and
adding to the problems already created by sea-borne plastic
materials in the form of injuries and mortality among marine
mammals and birds.
Barnes examined about 200 items of debris washed ashore on
each of 30 islands, which were scattered over a geographical
range extending from Spitsbergen in the Arctic to Signy Island
in the Antarctic. [He] found that 20–80% of this debris
was anthropogenic (man-made) in origin. Many types of animal
use marine debris as a mobile home, particularly bryozoans,
barnacles, polychaete worms, hydroids and molluscs (in order
of abundance), and I found that among the most numerous were
animals with cosmopolitan distributions.
Barnes
(2002).
- Ship's
Ballast Water.
Ballast water being pumped from
a ship in port.
From MIT
Sea Grant Center for Coastal Resources.
Ballast water is fresh or saltwater held
in the ballast tanks and cargo holds of ships. It is used to provide
stability and maneuverability during a voyage when ships are not
carrying cargo, not carrying heavy enough cargo, or when more stability
is required due to rough seas. Ballast water may also be used to
add weight so that a ship sinks low enough in the water to pass
under bridges and other structures.
Usually ballast water is pumped into ballast tanks when a ship
has delivered cargo to a port and is departing with less cargo
or no cargo. Ballast water is then transported and released at
the next port-of-call where the ship picks up more cargo. If
a ship is receiving or delivering cargo to a number of ports,
it may release or take on a portion of ballast water at each
port. In such cases, the ship’s ballast water contains
a mix of waters from multiple ports.
From MIT
Sea Grant Center for Coastal Resources.
Some Infamous Invasive Species
- America's
Least Wanted (1.2 MB PDF file) are listed by Conserve Online,
a "one-stop" online,
public library, created and maintained by The Nature Conservancy
in partnership with other conservation organizations.
- European
Green Crab.
The European green crab first entered
the U.S. in the mid 1800's, coming by sailing ship to the Cape
Cod region. In the early 1900's they spread northwards, arriving
in Maine in the 1950's they are believed to have contributed
to the dramatic declines in the soft shell clam fishery. Soon
they had migrated all the way up to Nova Scotia. In 1989 they
were discovered on the West Coast, in San Francisco Bay. They
may have come in the ballast water of ships, they may have been
shipped over hidden in the kelp packing around live main lobsters
or Atlantic bait worms... In areas where the crab have been able
to establish reproducing populations they have had dramatic impacts
on other species, particularly smaller shore crab, clams, and
small oysters. While the crab cannot crack the shell of a mature
oyster, it can prey upon young oysters, and will dig down six
inches to find clams to eat. One green crab can consume 40 half-inch
clams a day, as well as other crabs its own size.
From Washington
Department of Fish and Wildlife.
European Green Crab (Carcinus maenas).
From Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife Aquatic
Nuisance Species
- Caulpera
taxifolia on the US west coast, including its Invasion
of a lagoon near San Diego. More info see San
Diego Regional Water Quality Board.
Caulpera taxifolia covering the sea floor in the Mediterranean
Sea offshore of Monaco. It was introduced to the Mediterranean
in wastewater from the Oceanographic Museum at Monaco where
it now covers over 13,000 hectares of seabed along 190
km of coast.
From Global
Invasive Species Database.
- Lionfsh in Southeast
Atlantic.
Lionfish, a native of the
Indian and Pacific oceans, are now considered established in the
Atlantic Ocean. First discovered off the coast of North Carolina
in 2000 by the NOAA National Centers for Coastal Ocean Science, they
are believed to have been present off the east coast of Florida since
the mid 1990s. Lionfish, popular in the aquarium trade, were likely
introduced through releases by amateur aquarists no longer wishing
to keep the fish.
Reported by NOAA Center
for Coastal Fisheries and Habitat Research.
Lionfish collected taken in 2005 NOAA survey offshore of North Carolina.
From NOAA Press
Release on Lionfish.
- Mitten
Crab in bays and estuaries. This asian species is rapidly invading
brackish water in bays and estuaries on the east and west coast.
The Chinese mitten crab (Eriocheir sinensis) is a migrating crab which
has invaded Europe and, more recently, North America. It contributes
to the local extinction of native invertebrates and modifies habitats.
As well as causing erosion by its intensive burrowing activity, the crab
may cost fisheries and aquaculture industries several of hundreds of
thousands of dollars per year by stealing bait and feeding on trapped
fish. The female carries 250,000 to 1 million eggs and control strategies
such as electrical screens have failed to prevent crab migration.
From Global
Invasive Species Database.

Mitten crab.
From Global
Invasive Species Database.
Reference
Barnes, D. K. A. (2002). "Biodiversity: Invasions by marine
life on plastic debris." Nature 416 (6883): 808-809.
Kolar, C. S. and D. M. Lodge (2002). "Ecological Predictions and
Risk Assessment for Alien Fishes in North America." Science
298(5596): 1233-1236.
Revised on:
17 April, 2009
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