Conservation scientists in India are raising concerns over the spread of invasive alien species (IAS) that threaten native biodiversity, ecosystems, and livelihoods.
- Researchers are divided on whether to first document the full extent of invasions or act simultaneously on conservation and management.
Invasive Alien Species (IAS)
- Definition (IUCN): IAS are animals, plants or other organisms that are introduced by humans, either intentionally or accidentally, into places outside of their natural range.
- Scale of the Problem:
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- Around 1 in 10 species on the IUCN Red List are threatened by IAS.
- Globally, about 37,000 alien species are established, of which 3,500 (10%) are harmful.
- Nearly 200 new alien species are recorded each year.
- Impact: Displace native flora and fauna, disrupt habitats, and cause ecological and economic losses.
- Pathways: Introduced as ornamental plants, fish for aquaculture, mosquito control, or revegetation efforts.
- India’s Scenario: India has around 139 invasive alien species, most being crop pests and invasive plants that affect native biodiversity and agriculture.
Prominent Invasive Species in India
- Lantana Camara:
- Introduced as an ornamental shrub during British rule, It blocks elephant and herbivore habitats, forcing wildlife into crop fields and escalating human–animal conflict.
- Thrives across varied soil types and is unpalatable to herbivores.
- Prosopis Juliflora (“Gando Bawar”):
- Introduced in the 19th century and planted in Gujarat’s Banni grasslands to prevent soil salinisation.
- Now covers 50–60% of the grassland, depleting groundwater and replacing native species such as Acacia.
- Paradoxically increased salt-water intrusion and disrupted pastoral networks.
- Aquatic Weeds:
- Water hyacinth, alligator weed, duckweed, and water lettuce dominate lakes and wetlands.
- Water hyacinth listed among the top 10 worst invasives clogs paddy fields, bird habitats, and national parks such as Kaziranga.
- Alien fish species introduced for aquaculture and sport fishing threaten 1,070 freshwater fish species across India.
Ecological and Socio-Economic Impacts
- Soil and Water Alteration: Invasive plants modify soil structure by altering porosity, nutrient composition, and water retention capacity.
- Biodiversity Loss: IAS outcompete native species for nutrients, sunlight, and habitat, leading to declines in population size, reproductive success, and even local extinctions.
- Example: In freshwater systems, alien fish like Tilapia and Common Carp displace indigenous species such as Tor putitora(Mahseer), threatening India’s freshwater fish diversity.
- Ecosystem Transformation: Invasives alter food webs, energy flow, and nutrient cycling, often converting diverse ecosystems into monocultures.
- Example: Invasive earthworms and snails accelerate nutrient cycling, disturbing soil microbial balance and carbon storage.
- Human–Wildlife Conflicts: When invasives degrade habitats or food sources, wildlife migrates toward human-dominated landscapes for sustenance.
- Example: Lantana camara’s spread in forest corridors forces elephants and deer to feed on crops, increasing incidents of crop raiding and property damage.