When is an invasive species not invasive?

All Hi-Tech Developments for the Military and Civilian Sectors
Post Reply
kdahm
Posts: 1677
Joined: Thu Feb 02, 2023 3:08 pm

When is an invasive species not invasive?

Post by kdahm »

So a crawfish species was introduced into Iberia in 1588, and has spread and been adapted to the ecosystem since then. Should it be protected and conserved? Should it be eradicated, like more recent invasive species? What's the proper balance here? Of course, being the EU, there are probably all kinds of regulations for this, many of which conflict and no good path to resolving them.

Personally, I think it's time to check how well it's integrated into most of the steam ecosystems where it's found, and make an individual determination. Especially because there aren't native crawfish and there aren't many native competitors in their niche.

https://www.ecoticias.com/en/what-for-c ... rab/29157/
What for centuries was considered a native species could in fact be a “royal whim” from 1588, and now science is reopening the debate on the Iberian crab

By ECONEWS
Published On: March 11, 2026 at 12:30 PM

Historic handwritten document with a preserved crayfish specimen, illustrating new research on the debated origin of the Iberian crayfish.

For more than fifty years, the so-called Iberian crayfish has appeared in Spain’s official catalogs as a vulnerable native species that needs urgent protection.

A new scientific study now argues that this freshwater crustacean is actually an Italian guest that arrived in 1588 to decorate King Philip II’s royal ponds, which puts Spain’s conservation policy in a very uncomfortable spot.
A royal fashion that rewrote river life

The research, led by ecologist Miguel Clavero from the Doñana Biological Station and art historian Alicia Sempere Marín from the University of Murcia, dives into 16th-century archives instead of fishing nets.

The team located more than a dozen documents dated between 1563 and 1588 that detail repeated attempts by Philip II’s court to stock crayfish in the ornamental ponds of the Royal Sites.
Read More: No cockroaches or rats: this would be the last living thing to become extinct on Earth

Early shipments from Flanders and France apparently failed. Only in early 1588 did a servant of the Grand Duke of Tuscany, Antonio de Ugnano, manage to transport live crayfish all the way to Madrid, earning a reward of 300 ducats, roughly the annual salary of a physician at the time.

The study identifies those animals as the Italian crayfish Austropotamobius fulcisianus. Today, crayfish with the same genetic lineages occupy many Iberian streams and are still widely treated as the “Iberian” species by administrations and management plans.
When a protected species is not really native

Here is where the story collides with modern law. Spain’s Law 42 of 2007 on Natural Heritage and Biodiversity defines an invasive alien species as one that is introduced or established in a natural or semi-natural ecosystem and acts as an agent of change and a threat to native diversity, either through invasive behavior or genetic contamination.

At the same time, the national Strategy for the Conservation of the Iberian Crayfish approved in 2024 by the Ministry for Ecological Transition describes the animal as a native member of the Austropotamobius pallipes complex. It aims to sharply reduce its high extinction risk, coordinate work across thirteen autonomous communities, and guide recovery plans at regional level.
Read More: Elon Musk admits in February 2026 that convincing married engineers to relocate to Starbase, 40 minutes from Brownsville and near the Mexican border, has become his biggest silent problem

That strategy rests on genetic studies that interpreted the diversity of crayfish lineages in the peninsula as evidence of a local origin and considered a historical introduction from Italy unlikely. The new archival work tells a different story by tying Iberian populations directly to Tuscany, with dates, names, and even the royal payment recorded on paper.

So what happens when a species that the law treats as native and vulnerable turns out to be a carefully documented import from another country?
A policy puzzle for Spain’s rivers

For decades, Spanish agencies have spent money and effort trying to keep this crayfish from disappearing. The national strategy highlights a long list of pressures that will sound familiar to anyone who lives near a stressed river. Drought and shrinking summer flows.

Dirty water. Illegal harvest. Above all, outbreaks of crayfish plague, a disease linked to the arrival of other exotic crayfish that has wiped out most local populations since the 1970s.

To respond, authorities proposed measures such as protecting and restoring habitat, improving water quality, reinforcing key populations, running captive breeding programs, and limiting the spread of non-native crayfish species. They also called for standardized monitoring, applied research, and public education campaigns.

Many of those actions would still make sense even if the species is officially reclassified. Healthy headwater streams are good for much more than crayfish. Yet the basic justification shifts. Are managers trying to save a unique native lineage or maintain a long established but foreign one while keeping even newer invaders out?

Clavero is blunt about it. In the press release from the Doñana Biological Station he argues that it “makes no sense for administrations to continue treating the Italian crayfish, an introduced species, as one of their conservation priorities” and calls for strategies to be reconsidered in light of the evidence now on the table.

Other specialists quoted in Spanish media warn that labeling a species present since the 16th century as invasive could open a legal and scientific Pandora’s box. They point out that this crayfish has been woven into rural economies and cultural landscapes for generations and that a sudden shift in status could leave the few remaining strong populations without any protection at all.
What does “native” really mean?

Behind this one crustacean sits a broader question that many countries are quietly wrestling with. When we defend a “native” species, are we protecting nature as it looked before large-scale human changes, as it functions today, or as we remember it from childhood fishing trips?

Spanish law already allows some flexibility for species introduced long ago that have social or economic relevance. Including the Italian crayfish in the national catalog of invasive alien species would trigger strict bans on release, farming, and trade, and set eradication or strong control as the official goal.

That scenario would clash head on with existing programs that still aim to maintain or even expand its range in certain basins.

To a large extent, the fate of this crayfish will depend on how policymakers weigh historical origin against current ecological roles and social values. The study by Clavero and Sempere shows that bringing historians into conservation debates can completely redraw the map of what we think is native. It also suggests that many other “cryptic” species could change category once someone opens the right archive box.

For now, the Italian crayfish is a small animal carrying five centuries of human choices on its back. A royal whim in Philip II’s gardens, a peasant delicacy, a symbol of river loss, and maybe an introduced species protected by mistake.

The study was published in Biological Conservation.
warshipadmin
Posts: 858
Joined: Mon Nov 28, 2022 4:16 am

Re: When is an invasive species not invasive?

Post by warshipadmin »

Tricky one. It's not exactly a major issue here, but does generate froth and bubbles, dingoes were only brought to Australia a few thousand years ago. They outcompeted some of the local wildlife species(the extinction of mainland Thylacine and Tasmanian Devil roughly coincide with the Dingos arrival in subfossil assemblages), but these days they probably help hunt feral cats (not too sure about that, but that's the claim) and foxes.
Rocket J Squrriel
Posts: 1116
Joined: Thu Nov 17, 2022 5:23 pm

Re: When is an invasive species not invasive?

Post by Rocket J Squrriel »

There is no native species of it, doesn't seem to be a negative factor with the general environment/other species, and has fitted into its niche quite well?

Leave it alone.
Westray: That this is some sort of coincidence. Because they don't really believe in coincidences. They've heard of them. They've just never seen one.
User avatar
PLB
Posts: 216
Joined: Thu Nov 17, 2022 5:20 pm

Re: When is an invasive species not invasive?

Post by PLB »

If you go back far enough, every species is invasive.
This strikes me as two government agencies looking for more power over the other.

Paul
Poohbah
Posts: 3467
Joined: Thu Nov 17, 2022 2:08 pm
Location: San Diego, CA

Re: When is an invasive species not invasive?

Post by Poohbah »

PLB wrote: Fri Mar 13, 2026 7:27 pm If you go back far enough, every species is invasive.
This strikes me as two government agencies looking for more power over the other.

Paul
Require the agency heads to resolve this in one week.

If they fail to do so, they must duel with the lirpa and ahn-woon. (Cranks up "Amok Time" fight music)
Post Reply