Invasive species cost society over $2.8 trillion in damage, study shows
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Farmers harvesting corn in Jiayuguan, in China's Gansu province. Invasive wild boars can cause agricultural damage to crops, cornfields and vineyards.
PHOTO: REUTERS
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PARIS – From river-clogging plants to disease-carrying insects, the direct economic cost of invasive species worldwide has averaged about US$35 billion (S$45 billion) a year for decades, researchers said on May 26.
Since 1960, damage from non-native plants and animals expanding into new territory has cost society more than US$2.2 trillion, 17 times higher than previous estimates, they reported in the journal Nature Ecology & Evolution.
The accelerating spread of invasive species – from mosquitoes to wild boars to tough-to-eradicate plants – blights agriculture, spreads disease and drives the growing pace of species extinction.
Earlier calculations based on highly incomplete data were already known to fall far short of reality.
To piece together a more accurate picture, an international team of researchers led by Professor Ismael Soto, a scientist at the University of South Bohemia in the Czech Republic, compiled data on 162 invasive species whose costs have been well documented in at least a handful of countries.
They then modelled the economic impact for 78 other countries such as Bangladesh and Costa Rica, for which no data was previously available.
“We expected an underestimation of invasion costs, but the magnitude was striking,” Prof Soto told AFP.
Due mainly to high volumes of trade and travel, tens of thousands of animal and plant species have taken root, sometimes literally, far from their places of origin.
Europe is by far the continent most affected by the phenomenon, followed by North America and Asia.
“Plants were the most economically damaging group, both for damage and management,” Prof Soto said. “Cost hot spots include urban coastal areas, notably in Europe, eastern China and the US.”
Animals can cause devastating damage too.
Wild boars, for example, destroy crops, cornfields and vineyards, while mosquitoes – with expanding ranges due to global warming – impose direct costs to human health by spreading diseases such as dengue and malaria.
Another example is Japanese knotweed, an invasive plant that is very common in Europe and requires costly eradication programmes.
“Our study is based on only 162 species,” Prof Soto noted. “Our figure is probably still an underestimate of a wider problem and, therefore, the real economic costs could be even higher.”
Using a broader definition – including indirect costs such as lost income – the UN’s biodiversity expert group, Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services, calculated that the total cost of invasive species to society was about US$400 billion annually. AFP

