HomeNewsTrends37,000 'alien species' catalogued worldwide, 10% aggressively harmful: UN

37,000 'alien species' catalogued worldwide, 10% aggressively harmful: UN

From rats, cats and mosquitoes to a rogue's gallery of plants, a major scientific assessment catalogued more than 37,000 alien species worldwide, 10 per cent of them classified as aggressively harmful, or 'invasive'.

September 05, 2023 / 08:50 IST
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Amazon jungle Colombia AFP
Invasive species are a growing and costly threat, the report said.

Invasive species that wreck crops, ravage forests, spread disease, and upend ecosystems are spreading ever faster across the globe, and humanity has not been able to stem the tide, a major scientific assessment said Monday.

The failure is costing well over $400 billion dollars a year in damages and lost income -- the equivalent to the GDP of Denmark or Thailand -- and that is likely a "gross underestimation", according to the intergovernmental science advisory panel for the UN Convention on Biodiversity (IPBES).

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From water hyacinth choking Lake Victoria in East Africa, to rats and brown snakes wiping out bird species in the Pacific, to mosquitoes exposing new regions to Zika, yellow fever, dengue and other diseases, the report catalogued more than 37,000 so-called alien species that have taken root -- often literally -- far from their places of origin.

That number is trending sharply upward, along with the bill for the damage multiplying fourfold per decade, on average, since 1970.