What Are Invasive Alien Species?
An Invasive Alien Species (IAS) is a species introduced outside its natural range (intentionally or accidentally) that becomes established and spreads, causing harm to biodiversity, ecosystems, human health, or the economy.
Three conditions must be met:
- Alien (non-native / exotic / introduced) — not naturally occurring in that ecosystem
- Established — capable of self-sustaining populations without human assistance
- Invasive — spreads and causes measurable harm
IAS are recognised as one of the five direct drivers of biodiversity loss, alongside habitat change, overexploitation, pollution, and climate change. The IPBES 2023 Invasive Alien Species Assessment identified over 3,500 harmful IAS globally, causing $423 billion in annual economic damages.
Pathways of Introduction
Intentional Introduction
- Horticulture / ornamental: Water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes) introduced as ornamental; Lantana camara as garden plant
- Forestry: Eucalyptus and Prosopis juliflora introduced for afforestation and fuel
- Agriculture / aquaculture: Common carp and Tilapia introduced for fish farming
- Biocontrol: Some introduced biocontrol agents later became invasive themselves
Accidental Introduction
- Contaminated grain imports: Parthenium hysterophorus believed to have arrived via wheat imports from the USA in 1956
- Ballast water discharge: Ships discharge ballast water loaded at foreign ports, releasing non-native marine organisms
- Cargo and packaging material: Insects and pathogens hitchhike in timber, pallets, soil
- Tourism and travel: Pathogens, small invertebrates transported on footwear, clothing
Why Are IAS Problematic? Mechanisms of Impact
| Mechanism | Description | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Competition | Outcompete native species for food, space, light, nutrients | Lantana displaces native forest understory vegetation |
| Predation | Prey on native species that have no evolved defences | African catfish preys on native fish; Red-eared slider predates on native turtles |
| Hybridisation | Interbreed with native species, diluting genetic identity | Introduced trout hybridise with native mahseer |
| Herbivory | Invasive herbivores damage native plant communities | Feral pigs in forests; invasive rabbits |
| Habitat modification | Alter physical/chemical environment | Water hyacinth depletes oxygen; Prosopis alters soil nitrogen |
| Disease transmission | Carry pathogens to which natives have no immunity | Chytrid fungus (introduced with bullfrogs) devastates native amphibians |
| Allelopathy | Release chemicals that suppress native plants | Parthenium releases allelopathic substances suppressing crop germination |
Major Invasive Alien Species in India
India has recorded over 2,500 alien plant species (as of 2023), of which several have become highly invasive. The list below covers species most frequently tested in UPSC.
Invasive Plants
| Species | Common Name | Origin | Introduced | Key Impacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lantana camara | Lantana | Tropical America | 1800s (ornamental) | Occupies ~40% of Indian forests; dense thickets block forest regeneration; toxic berries harm wildlife |
| Parthenium hysterophorus | Congress grass / Carrot weed | Mexico/Central America | ~1956 via wheat imports | Causes human skin allergy, asthma; reduces crop yields via allelopathy; toxic to livestock |
| Eichhornia crassipes | Water hyacinth / Jalkumbhi | South America | ~1890s (ornamental) | Clogs rivers, lakes, reservoirs; depletes dissolved oxygen killing fish; blocks navigation and irrigation |
| Prosopis juliflora | Vilayati kikar / Mesquite | Americas | 1870s (afforestation) | Deep taproot depletes groundwater; spreads aggressively in arid areas; thorns injure livestock |
| Mikania micrantha | Mile-a-minute weed | Central/South America | Accidental | Smothers native vegetation; major problem in Northeast India, tea gardens; threatens forest edges |
| Chromolaena odorata | Siam weed | Americas | Accidental | Invasive in Northeast India and peninsular forests; creates fire risk; allelopathic |
| Ageratum conyzoides | Goatweed | Americas | Accidental | Agricultural weed; allelopathic; found across India |
| Salvinia molesta | Kariba weed | Brazil | Accidental | Invasive floating fern; blocks water bodies; threatens wetland ecosystems |
Invasive Animals
| Species | Common Name | Origin | Introduced | Key Impacts |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Clarias gariepinus | African catfish | Africa | 1990s (aquaculture) | Voracious predator; threatens native fish; escaped from fish farms |
| Pterygoplichthys spp. | Suckermouth armoured catfish | South America | Via aquarium trade | Competes with native fish; resistant to many environments; spreading in Kerala, Tamil Nadu rivers |
| Tilapia (Oreochromis spp.) | Tilapia | Africa | 1950s–60s (aquaculture) | Outcompetes native fish; hybridises with natives; alters aquatic vegetation |
| Cyprinus carpio | Common carp | Central Asia | Long ago (aquaculture) | Disturbs sediment; increases turbidity; reduces native aquatic plants |
| Trachemys scripta elegans | Red-eared slider turtle | North America | Pet trade | Competes with native freshwater turtles; predates on fish, frogs; found in urban water bodies |
| Rana catesbeiana | American bullfrog | North America | Via pet/food trade | Predates on small native vertebrates; carrier of chytrid fungus |
IAS in Indian Islands — A Critical Vulnerability
Indian islands are global biodiversity hotspots but especially vulnerable to IAS due to endemic species with no evolved defences.
Andaman & Nicobar Islands:
- Spotted deer (Axis axis) introduced in the 1950s — grazes on native forest regeneration, damages Nicobar biosphere
- Chital and feral pigs threaten nesting grounds of sea turtles and birds
- Myna birds and cats predate on native bird populations
- Invasive plants like Lantana and Mikania threaten endemic flora
Lakshadweep:
- Rats predate heavily on seabird nests and turtle eggs
- Invasive plant species alter coral island ecology
- Being low-lying coral islands, any ecological disruption has amplified impacts
The IUCN has identified island IAS as among the most serious drivers of global extinction — more than 80% of recorded bird extinctions on islands were caused by IAS.
IUCN's 100 Worst Invasive Species
The IUCN Species Survival Commission Invasive Species Specialist Group (ISSG) maintains a list of the 100 of the World's Worst Invasive Alien Species. Indian species on this list include:
- Water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes)
- Lantana camara
- Mimosa pigra (giant sensitive plant)
- Parthenium hysterophorus
Global Frameworks
Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) — Article 8(h)
CBD Article 8(h) requires each Party to "prevent the introduction of, and control or eradicate those alien species which threaten ecosystems, habitats or species." This is the primary international legal obligation on IAS.
Aichi Biodiversity Target 9 (2011–2020)
Under the Nagoya CBD Strategic Plan, Aichi Target 9 aimed: "By 2020, invasive alien species and pathways are identified and prioritised, priority species are controlled or eradicated, and measures are in place to manage pathways to prevent their introduction and establishment." This target was widely regarded as one of the least-achieved Aichi Targets globally.
Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework (2022) — Target 6
Adopted at COP15 (Kunming, 2022), GBF Target 6 requires parties to:
- Eliminate, minimise, and reduce impacts of IAS by identifying and managing introduction pathways
- Prevent introduction and establishment of priority invasive alien species
- Reduce rates of introduction of known IAS by at least 50% by 2030
- Eradicate or control IAS, especially in priority sites such as islands
Target 6 is more specific and ambitious than Aichi Target 9 and is directly linked to GBF Target 3 (30×30 — 30% protected areas by 2030).
Other International Instruments
- International Plant Protection Convention (IPPC): Governs phytosanitary measures; prevents spread of plant pests
- IMO Ballast Water Management Convention (2004): Controls marine IAS spread through ballast water
- Nagoya Protocol: Includes provisions relevant to IAS in genetic resources context
India's Policy and Legal Framework
Wildlife Protection Act, 1972
The WPA does not have specific comprehensive provisions for IAS, but Schedule IV and V list vermin species. Amendments have been called for to explicitly address IAS threats.
Environment Protection Act, 1986
The EPA empowers the Central Government to take measures to prevent environmental damage — provides a legal basis for IAS control actions, though not IAS-specific.
Biological Diversity Act, 2002
Section 38 of the BD Act empowers the National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) to take measures to regulate and control access to biological resources, including invasive ones.
National Biodiversity Action Plan (NBSAP) 2008 and 2014
India's NBSAP lists IAS management as a priority action. India's updated NBSAP 2022 (submitted at COP15) includes IAS targets aligned with GBF Target 6.
Institutional Roles
| Institution | Role |
|---|---|
| Botanical Survey of India (BSI) | Documents invasive plant species; maintains herbarium records |
| Zoological Survey of India (ZSI) | Documents invasive animal species; surveys |
| ICAR | Research on biological control of agricultural IAS like Parthenium |
| National Biodiversity Authority (NBA) | Policy coordination; BD Act implementation |
| Wildlife Institute of India (WII) | Research on IAS impacts in protected areas |
| MoEFCC | Nodal ministry; policy and regulation |
| State Forest Departments | Ground-level management in forests |
Management Methods
1. Physical / Mechanical Control
- Manual uprooting, cutting, mowing — most common for Lantana
- Dredging for water hyacinth (used in Kerala)
- Trap and remove for animals
- Cut rootstock method identified as most cost-effective for Lantana
2. Chemical Control
- Herbicides (glyphosate for Lantana, Prosopis); regulated use required
- Risk of non-target effects and soil contamination
- Used as last resort or in combination with other methods
3. Biological Control
- Introducing natural enemies from the species' home range
- Success stories:
- Zygogramma bicolorata (Mexican beetle) introduced against Parthenium — significant control in some areas
- Neochetina eichhorniae and N. bruchi (weevils) used against water hyacinth in several Indian states
- Risk: Introduced biocontrol agents must be rigorously tested to prevent them becoming invasive themselves
4. Utilisation-Based Management
- Converting invasive species into a resource to incentivise removal
- Lantana furniture and handicrafts (promoted by tribal communities in forest areas)
- Water hyacinth converted to biogas, compost, handicrafts (Manipur, Kerala)
5. Early Warning and Rapid Response
- Key to preventing establishment — much cheaper than post-establishment control
- IUCN recommends national IAS alert systems and biosecurity measures at borders/ports
Success Stories and Challenges
Partial successes:
- Biological control of water hyacinth using weevils has reduced cover in some reservoirs
- Lantana furniture projects have created economic incentives for removal
- Removal of invasive rats from some Lakshadweep islands improved seabird nesting
Challenges:
- No dedicated comprehensive National IAS Strategy in India (unlike Australia, New Zealand)
- Fragmented institutional responsibility across BSI, ZSI, ICAR, MoEFCC
- Lack of complete national IAS inventory and monitoring system
- Climate change is expanding the range of many IAS — new areas becoming vulnerable
- Ornamental horticulture and aquarium trade continue to introduce new species with insufficient biosecurity
Exam Strategy
- Prelims: Focus on specific species names (scientific + common), their origin, how introduced, and key impact. Memorise the global frameworks: CBD 8(h), Aichi Target 9, GBF Target 6.
- Mains (GS3): IAS questions often appear as part of biodiversity conservation or protected area management questions. Discuss pathways → impacts → policy → management in a structured way.
- High-frequency species: Lantana camara (forests), Parthenium (agriculture/health), Water hyacinth (water bodies), African catfish (rivers/aquaculture), Suckermouth catfish (recent news), Prosopis (arid regions).
- Link to current affairs: Watch for news on suckermouth catfish spreading in rivers, Nile tilapia in Western Ghats water bodies, and India's National Biodiversity Strategy updates.
- Key distinction: Not all alien species are invasive — only those that cause harm. Many crops (rice, wheat) are technically alien but beneficial.
Previous Year Questions (PYQs)
Prelims
- With reference to the management of minor minerals in India, consider the following statements: ... (IAS context questions)
- Which of the following is/are invasive alien species in India? 1. Lantana camara 2. Eichhornia crassipes 3. Mikania micrantha — (All three are invasive — frequently tested)
- The term "Sucker fish" or "Janitor fish" recently seen in news refers to which species? (Suckermouth armoured catfish / Pterygoplichthys)
Mains
- What is meant by Invasive Alien Species? Explain the pathways through which they spread in India and discuss the measures taken by India to address this challenge. (GS3 2022 style)
- How does the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework address the threat of Invasive Alien Species? Examine India's obligations and policy response. (GS3)
- Discuss the ecological and economic impacts of Water hyacinth on India's aquatic ecosystems. What management approaches have been tried? (GS3)
BharatNotes