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"The spread of non-native species
is fast becoming one of our most costly ecological problems." -- Business
Week, May 24, 1999.
Rampant growth of global trade has increased the numbers of exotic insects, plants, and
animals that hitchhike into America on imported goods, in ship ballast water, and in cargo
holds. Exotic species that out-compete native species exact a growing cost on our health,
our natural heritage, and even our homes. But new trade agreements prevent regulators from
stopping these pests at our borders.
A Natural Disaster in the Making
Free trade eliminates more than national and economic boundaries. It also breaks down
physical barriers necessary to the diversity of life.
For millions of years after life first appeared, mountains, oceans, and deserts served
as natural barriers that prevented the rapid movement of species between habitats. When
introductions of non-native species did occur, the pace of new introductions was slow
enough to allow adaptation with minimal disruptions.
Now, however, the rampant growth of international trade - up 50% since 1990 - helps
species spread rapidly around the world unchecked. Growing international trade is working
a vast experiment on life itself, merging the world's many ecosystems into a handful of
biologically impoverished mono-systems.
Already, the costs are staggering. After habitat loss, the spread of non-native species
has emerged as the second greatest threat to native plants and animals in America. Nearly
half of the species listed as threatened or endangered in the United States are at risk
from exotic species.
Altogether exotic pests cost the U.S. economy more than $122 billion annually in lost
crops, denuded forests, and termite-infested homes according to a study conducted by
Cornell University ecologist David Pimentel.
An Ounce of Prevention
Once it begins, a "bio-invasion" cannot easily be stopped. While even a major
oil spill may dissipate over time, "biological pollution" will continue to grow
and spread. Prevention must, therefore, be the priority.
First, U.S. regulations must change.
Under present rules, the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) adopts an "innocent
until proven guilty" approach to invasive species. So we often don't learn that
particular pests are dangerous until they're running wild and it is too late to prevent
serious damage. Instead, we should prevent exotic critters from being introduced until we
know for certain that they are safe.
Second, international trade rules must be
"fixed."
Under current rules of the World Trade Organization (WTO), countries cannot take
strong, science-based precautionary steps to stop invasives at their borders. For example,
when the USDA adopted emergency rules to stop the Asian long-horned beetle in 1998, Hong
Kong immediately threatened to file a complaint with the WTO that could override the new
safeguards. WTO rules could be "fixed" with an executive trade agreement that
allows countries to impose regulations on suspicion that an import could be dangerous.
That way, we can prevent small problems before they become big ones.
Responsible Trade, Not Free Trade
In November 1999, the United States will host a Summit of the WTO in Seattle. Rather
than sign new trade agreements, the Clinton Administration should review and repair the
WTO so that it no longer undermines our environmental, health, and safety laws. The WTO
must be fixed to allow the prevention of emerging environmental risks, not just clean-up
after problems become too big to solve.
Pest Invaders: A Costly
LegacyRemember when our neighborhoods were shaded by giant, graceful elm
trees? America's landscape has been permanently impoverished by successive waves of pest
invaders such as Dutch elm disease. Remember, for a moment, how much we have lost. Then
think how much more more of America's natural heritage we still have to lose.
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Gypsy Moth
A widespread pest of Eurasian forests, the gypsy moth was introduced in the 1860s in a
vain effort to start an American silk industry. The moth is a chronic pest from Maine to
Michigan to Virginia. In 1981, the moth erupted to defoliate 12.8 million acres.
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Chestnut Blight
Once upon a time, the story goes, a squirrel could travel from Maine to Georgia by leaping
from one chestnut tree to another. The chesnut was wiped out by a fungus carried in a
shipment of Asian chestnut trees that landed in New York City in 1904.
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Dutch Elm Disease
Dutch elm disease arrived from Europe in a shipment of elm veneer logs in the 1930s. It
has since spread throughout the eastern half of the United States causing the virtual
extinction of the American elm - the huge, spreading trees that once shaded the streets in
many small towns.
For further information, contact:
Daniel Seligman
408 C St., NE
Washington, DC 20002
(202) 675-7907
margrete.strand@sierraclub.org
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