URI
biologist, colleagues warn of peril from biological invasions as White House
proposes to halve funding
As the Trump Administration prepares
to cut in half the budget for the National Invasive Species Council, a group of
invasive species experts led by a University of Rhode Island professor has
issued a warning about the growing peril of biological invasions and the
increasing threat they pose to the economy, environment, public health and national
security.
“Defunding invasion policy and
management at the federal level at a time when the rate of invasions into the
U.S. are increasing and is exacerbated by climate change is reckless and puts
the economic well-being, health and natural capital of U.S. citizens at risk,”
said Laura Meyerson, URI professor of natural resources science.
Along with colleagues James Carlton,
professor of marine sciences emeritus at Williams College, David Lodge,
professor of ecology and evolutionary biology at Cornell University, and Daniel
Simberloff, the Nancy Gore Hunger Professor at the University of Tennessee,
Meyerson published an editorial in this week’s edition of the journal Frontiers
in Ecology and the Environment.
In it they note that biological invasions in the United States “remain an unrelenting environmental and economic calamity impacting all segments of society.”
In it they note that biological invasions in the United States “remain an unrelenting environmental and economic calamity impacting all segments of society.”
Invasive species costs in the United
States are estimated at more than $100 billion annually. The scientists note
that the rapid movement of plants, animals, disease agents and pathogens into
the country has the potential to trigger epidemics that sweep through human
populations, crops and fisheries.
In addition, climate change is facilitating the arrival of new invaders and the expansion of established ones.
In addition, climate change is facilitating the arrival of new invaders and the expansion of established ones.
“Simply watching the spinning of the
multiple roulette wheels of globalization, climate change and habitat
degradation to see what the next invasion will be is a game we simply can’t
afford,” Carlton said.
Executive orders over the last 40 years
from Presidents Jimmy Carter, Bill Clinton and Barack Obama have acknowledged
the impact of invasive species and highlighted the necessity of interagency
cooperation, public education and technology to prevent and manage invasions.
The establishment of the National Invasive Species Council and the volunteer non-federal Invasive Species Advisory Council, as well as a regularly-updated National Invasive Species Management Plan, have helped to address the issue.
The establishment of the National Invasive Species Council and the volunteer non-federal Invasive Species Advisory Council, as well as a regularly-updated National Invasive Species Management Plan, have helped to address the issue.
The Trump Administration has
proposed to cut the National Invasive Species Council budget by 50 percent for
fiscal year 2020, even as damage from invasive species grows. In addition, the
Advisory Council has been placed on “administratively inactive status” due to
“financial constraints.”
“Insufficient coordinated attention
to invasive species is an especially important example of policy often lagging
behind emerging problems,” said Lodge. “The importance and urgency of
preventing harm from invasions has only increased in the last 20 years, and the
current renegotiations of trade practices and policies present a perfect
opportunity to prevent future invasions.”
“It is depressing that, just as
Europe belatedly begins a long overdue coordinated approach to stemming the
massive, increasing damage caused by invasions, the United States is
emasculating its only national governmental entity attempting to grapple with
this calamity,” added Simberloff.
In advocating for restoration of the
council’s budget and a renewed effort to tackle the invasive species threat,
Meyerson and her co-authors argue that the nation “cannot wait for climate
change and environmental degradation, facilitated by the weakening of federal
laws and rules, to result in waves of new invasions that could drain billions
of dollars from the economy. Reactive management is far costlier than proactive
planning,” they wrote.