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COP
VI/23 |
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Alien species that threaten
ecosystems, habitats or species*
The Conference of the Parties
I. STATUS AND TRENDS
- Notes the report on the status, impacts and
trends of alien species that threaten
ecosystems, habitats and species(49);
II. GUIDING PRINCIPLES FOR
THE IMPLEMENTATION OF ARTICLE 8(h)
Recognizing that invasive alien species
represent one of the primary threats to
biodiversity, especially in geographically and
evolutionary isolated ecosystems, such as small
island developing States, and that risks may be
increasing due to increased global trade,
transport, tourism and climate change,
Reaffirming that full and effective
implementation of Article 8(h) is a priority,
- Notes the consideration by the Subsidiary
Body on Scientific, Technical and Technological
Advice of the scientific and technical matters
relevant to the Guiding Principles;
- Notes that some non-scientific and technical
matters have been identified for its
consideration along with options for addressing
those matters;
- Having considered these options, adopts the
Guiding Principles annexed to the present
decision;
- Urges Parties, other Governments and
relevant organizations to promote and implement
the Guiding Principles;
III. RELEVANT INTERNATIONAL
INSTRUMENTS
Acknowledging the contribution to the
implementation of Article 8(h) of existing
international instruments, such as the
International Plant Protection Convention, and
relevant international organizations such as the
Office International des Epizooties, the
regional plant protection organizations, the
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations, the International Maritime
Organization, the World Health Organization and
other international organizations that develop
relevant standards and agreements,
Noting, however, in the light of the review
of the efficiency and efficacy of existing legal
instruments applicable to invasive alien
species(50), that there are certain
gaps and inconsistencies in the international
regulatory framework from the perspective of the
threats of invasive alien species to biological
diversity,
- Recommends that Parties to the Convention on
Biological Diversity and other Governments, as
appropriate, consider ratifying the revised
International Plant Protection Convention, and
calls on Parties, Governments, and relevant
organizations to actively work to enhance the
implementation of the International Plant
Protection Convention;
- Urges the International Maritime
Organization to complete the preparation of an
international instrument to address the
environmental damage caused by the introduction
of harmful aquatic organisms in ballast water
and to develop as a matter or urgency,
mechanisms to minimize hull-fouling as an
invasion pathway, and calls on Governments and
relevant organizations to urgently act to ensure
full implementation;
- Invites the International Plant Protection
Convention, the Office International des
Epizooties, the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations, the
International Maritime Organization, the World
Health Organization and other relevant
international instruments and organizations, as
they elaborate further standards and agreements,
or revise existing standards and agreements,
including for risk assessment/analysis, to
consider incorporating criteria related to the
threats to biological diversity posed by
invasive alien species; and invites further such
instruments and organizations to report on any
such ongoing, planned, or potential initiatives;
- Requests the Subsidiary Body on Scientific,
Technical and Technological Advice and other
international organizations such as the Global
Invasive Species Programme to identify and
explore, in light of the inter-sessional work
referred to in recommendation VI/4 A of the
Subsidiary Body, further specific gaps and
inconsistencies in the international regulatory
framework (including binding and non-binding
instruments as well as instruments at the
regional level and standards) from a technical
perspective of the threats of invasive alien
species to biological diversity, including
consideration of various pathways for the
transmission of invasive alien species, and to
report back to the Conference of the Parties at
its seventh meeting, taking into account further
relevant information arising from the
implementation of the present decision;
IV. OTHER OPTIONS
Reaffirming the importance of national and
regional invasive alien species strategies and
action plans, and of international collaboration
to address the threats to biodiversity of
invasive alien species and the need for funding
as a priority to implement existing strategies,
Noting the range of measures(51)
and the need to strengthen national capacities
and international collaboration,
(a) National invasive alien species
strategies and action plans
- Urges Parties and other Governments, in
implementing the Guiding Principles, and when
developing, revising and implementing national
biodiversity strategies and action plans to
address the threats posed by invasive alien
species, to:
- Identify national needs and priorities;
- Create mechanisms to coordinate national
programmes;
- Review, in the light of the Guiding
Principles, relevant policies, legislation and
institutions to identify gaps, inconsistencies
and conflicts, and, as appropriate, adjust or
develop policies, legislation and institutions;
- Enhance cooperation between the various
sectors, including the private sector that might
provide pathways or vectors for the unintended
transfer of invasive alien species, in order to
improve prevention, early detection, eradication
and/or control of invasive alien species, and in
particular, ensure communication between focal
points of respective relevant international
instruments;
- Promote awareness of the threats to
biological diversity and related ecosystem goods
and services posed by invasive alien species and
of the means to address such threats, among
policy makers at all levels of government, and
in the private sector; quarantine, customs and
other border officials; and the general public;
- Facilitate the involvement of all
stakeholder groups, including in particular
indigenous and local communities, and the
private sector, as well as all levels of
government, in national invasive alien species
strategies and action plans, and in decisions
related to the use of alien species that may be
invasive;
- Collaborate with trading partners and
neighbouring countries, regionally, and with
other countries, as appropriate, in order to
address threats of invasive alien species to
biological diversity in ecosystems that cross
international boundaries, to migratory species,
and to address matters of common interest;
- Urges existing regional organizations and
networks to work cooperatively to actively
support the development and implementation of
invasive alien species strategies and action
plans, and to develop regional strategies where
appropriate;
- Encourages Parties and other Governments, in
undertaking this work and, in particular, when
developing priority actions, to consider the
need to:
- Develop capacity to use risk
assessment/analysis to address threats of
invasive alien species to biological diversity,
and incorporate such methodologies in
environmental impact assessments, and strategic
environmental assessments, as appropriate and
relevant;
- Develop financial measures, and other
policies and tools, to promote activities to
reduce the threat of invasive alien species;
- When necessary, develop recommendations and
strategies to take account of effects of alien
species on populations and naturally occurring
genetic diversity;
- Incorporate invasive alien species
considerations into national biodiversity
strategies and action plans and into sectoral
and cross-sectoral policies, strategies and
plans, taking into account the ecosystem
approach, and in order to ensure full
implementation of the national invasive alien
species strategies and action plans as called
for in paragraph 6 of decision V/8 of the
Conference of the Parties;
- Notes the technical information developed by
the Executive Secretary, the Subsidiary Body on
Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice
and the Global Invasive Species Programme and
commends this information to Parties for use in
national implementation of Article 8(h) and
requests the Executive Secretary to ensure that
the technical information developed within the
Convention on Biological Diversity is readily
available to Parties in an appropriate form,
including through technical publications and the
clearing-house mechanism;
- Urges the Global Invasive Species Programme
and other relevant organizations to evaluate
known and potential pathways for the
introduction of invasive alien species and
identify opportunities to minimize incursions
and manage risks, and:
- Provide advice to Governments and
organizations on actions to be taken at national
and regional levels; and
- Provide recommendations to the Conference of
the Parties at its seventh meeting on actions to
be taken at the international level;
(b) International cooperation
- Urges Parties, Governments, multilateral
organizations and other relevant bodies to
consider the potential effects of global change
on the risk of invasive alien species to
biodiversity, and related ecosystem goods and
services and, in particular:
- Invites the United Nations Framework
Convention on Climate Change to consider this
matter when it considers measures for adaptation
to and mitigation of climate change in
particular with respect to the lifestyles of
indigenous and local communities;
- Invites the World Trade Organization,
through its Committee on Trade and the
Environment, to take this matter into account
when considering the impacts of trade and trade
liberalization;
- Invites the Food and Agriculture
Organization of the United Nations, the World
Health Organization, the United Nations
Development Programme, the United Nations
Environment Programme, the World Bank and other
development agencies to take this matter into
account when considering the impacts of land-use
change, agriculture, aquaculture, forestry,
health and development policies and activities;
- Invites the Convention on the Conservation
of Migratory Species of Wild Animals, the
Convention on Wetlands (Ramsar, Iran, 1971), the
Convention on the Conservation of European
Wildlife and Natural Habitats, the Convention on
International Trade in Endangered Species of
Wild Fauna and Flora, the World Heritage
Convention, and the Man and the Biosphere
Programme of the United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization, in
collaboration with relevant organizations, to
promote further the implementation of Article
8(h) within their mandates, through, inter
alia, the development of guidance, best
practices and pilot projects that address the
threats of invasive alien species to particular
sites or habitats, including means to enhance
the capacity of ecosystems to resist or recover
from alien species invasions;
- Invites international organizations to
develop financial and other measures for the
promotion of activities aiming to reduce the
harmful effects of invasive alien species;
- Acknowledges the contribution of the Global
Invasive Species Programme to the sixth meeting
of the Subsidiary Body on Scientific, Technical
and Technological Advice, particularly the
provision of technical advice and therefore:
- Welcomes phase II of the Global Invasive
Species Programme and urges Parties, countries
and other organizations to support the work of
the Global Invasive Species Programme to
minimize the spread and impact of invasive alien
species, and consider the Global Strategy on
Invasive Alien Species when developing national
plans and regional strategies;
- Recommends continuing cooperation with the
Global Invasive Species Programme and requests
the Executive Secretary to explore the
development of arrangements for this further
cooperation;
- Endorses the international cooperative
initiative on invasive alien species on islands,
developed by the Government of the New Zealand,
the Invasive Species Specialist Group, and the
Global Invasive Species Programme, and calls on
the Global Environment Facility, Parties,
Governments and relevant organizations to
support and participate in these initiatives;
- Invites the International Maritime
Organization, the Global Invasive Species
Programme, the Food and Agriculture Organization
of the United Nations, and the Convention on
Wetlands (Ramsar, Iran, 1971) to work together
to develop an international cooperative
initiative to address impediments to the
management of marine alien species, particularly
to address technical problems related to the
identification and control of marine invasions;
- Welcomes the initiative of the Council of
Europe in the framework of the Bern Convention
to help the implementation of Article 8(h),
including the development of a European Strategy
on Invasive Alien Species;
- Also welcomes the "I3N" (Inter-American
Biodiversity Information Network (IABIN)
Invasives Information Network) initiative on
invasive alien species, and calls on the Global
Environment Facility, Parties, Governments and
relevant organizations to support and
participate in these initiatives;
- Welcomes the initiative of the Interim
Commission on Phytosanitary Measures and the
secretariat of the International Plant
Protection Convention to develop closer
relationships to the Convention on Biological
Diversity and its work;
(c) Assessment, information and tools
- Urges Parties, Governments and relevant
organizations, at the appropriate level, with
the support of relevant international
organizations to promote and carry out, as
appropriate, research and assessments on:
- The characteristics of invasive species and
the vulnerability of ecosystems and habitats to
invasion by alien species, and the impact of
climate change on these
parameters(52);
- The impact of alien species on biological
diversity;
- Analysis of the importance of various
pathways for the introduction of invasive alien
species;
- The socio-economic implications of invasive
alien species particularly the implications for
indigenous and local communities;
- The development of environmentally benign
methods to control and eradicate invasive alien
species, including measures for use in
quarantine and to control fouling of ship hulls;
- The costs and benefits of the use of
biocontrol agents to control and eradicate
invasive alien species;
- Means to enhance the capacity of ecosystems
to resist or recover from alien species
invasions;
- Priorities for taxonomic work through,
inter alia, the Global Taxonomy
Initiative(53);
- Criteria for assessing risks from
introduction of alien species to biological
diversity at the genetic, species and ecosystem
levels;
- The use of the traditional knowledge of
indigenous and local communities in the
development and implementation of measures to
address invasive alien species, in accordance
with Article 8(j) of the Convention;
- Decides that the clearing-house mechanism
will be used to facilitate scientific and
technical cooperation on the topics listed under
paragraph 24 above, in order to enhance the
ability of the clearing-house mechanism to
promote and facilitate scientific and technical
cooperation, and welcomes the Global Invasive
Species Programme as an international thematic
focal point for alien species under the
clearing-house mechanism, and calls on Parties,
countries and relevant organizations to
contribute to the creation and maintenance of
the global information network, in particular
to:
- Ensure effective international cooperation
and expertise sharing;
- Provide information to assist countries to
perform effective risk analysis;
- Provide information on potential pathway of
alien invasive species; and
- Provide support for management and control
efforts, particularly for locating technical
support for rapid response activities;
- Requests the Executive Secretary in
cooperation with the Global Invasive Species
Programme and other relevant organizations to:
- Compile information on topics listed in
paragraph 24 above, in collaboration with
relevant organizations;
- Identify the key scientific, technical and
public awareness impediments to implementation
of priority actions at the national and regional
levels;
- Develop, in partnership with relevant
Parties, countries and relevant organizations,
solutions to those impediments;
- Disseminate those solutions to Parties and
regional organizations; and
- Develop a joint programme of work through
the Global Invasive Species Programme
partnership network among the Convention on
Biological Diversity, the Convention on Wetlands
(Ramsar, Iran, 1971), the International Maritime
Organization, the International Plant Protection
Convention and other relevant bodies;
- Urges Parties, Governments and relevant
organizations, at the appropriate level, to
develop and make available technical tools and
related information to support efforts for the
prevention, early detection, monitoring,
eradication and/or control of invasive alien
species and to support public awareness-raising
and environmental education to the extent
possible;
- Requests the Executive Secretary, within the
availability of resources and in collaboration
with relevant organizations, to support the
development and dissemination of technical tools
and related information on the prevention, early
detection, monitoring, eradication and/or
control of invasive alien species through,
inter alia:
- Compilation and dissemination of
case-studies submitted by Parties, other
Governments and organizations, best practices
and lessons learned, drawing upon, as
appropriate, tools listed in information
document UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/6/INF/3 and the
"Toolkit" compiled by the Global Invasive
Species Programme(54);
- Further compilation and preparation of
anthologies of existing terminology used in
international instruments relevant to invasive
alien species, and to develop, and update as
necessary, a non-legally binding list of terms
most commonly used;
- Compilation and making available lists of
procedures for risk assessment/analysis and
pathway analysis which may be relevant in
assessing the risks of invasive alien species to
biodiversity, habitats and ecosystems;
- Identification and inventory of existing
expertise relevant to the prevention, early
detection and warning, eradication and/or
control of invasive alien species, and
restoration of invaded ecosystems and habitats,
which may be made available to other countries,
including the roster of experts for the
Convention on Biological Diversity;
- Development of databases and facilitated
access to such information for all countries
including repatriation of information to source
countries, through, inter alia, the
clearing-house mechanism;
- Development of systems for reporting new
invasions of alien species and the spread of
alien species into new areas;
- Requests the Executive Secretary to take
appropriate actions to ensure that invasive
alien species considerations are fully
integrated into thematic work programmes of the
Convention and when reporting on the thematic
work programmes to report specifically on how
the threats and impacts of invasive alien
species will be addressed;
- Notes that, in implementing this decision,
Parties, Governments, the Subsidiary Body on
Scientific, Technical and Technological Advice,
the Executive Secretary and relevant
organizations are referred to annex II of the
report of the liaison group meeting on invasive
alien species(55);
V. ACTIVITIES AND
CAPACITY-BUILDING
- Requests the Executive Secretary to explore
means to facilitate capacity enhancement for
eradication work on alien species on continents
and islands;
- Given the constraints to implementation of
Article 8(h) identified in the assessment of
second national reports with respect to
cross-cutting issues(56) and urges
the Executive Secretary to use the
clearing-house mechanism to provide an on-line
educational programme;
- Requests the Executive Secretary, in
collaboration with the Global Invasive Species
Programme, the Global Environment Facility, the
Food and Agriculture Organization of the United
Nations and the Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development, to identify a
mechanism(s) for providing Parties with access
to financial support for rapidly responding to
new incursions by alien species, and report to
the Conference of the Parties at its seventh
meeting on progress to establish that
mechanism(s);
- Urges bilateral donors and other funding
sources to provide, as an urgent priority
funding for the development and implementation,
at national and regional levels, of the invasive
alien species strategies and action plans called
for in paragraph 6 of decision V/8 and with a
particular priority for those strategies and
actions related to geographically and
evolutionarily isolated ecosystems, and to
developing countries and countries with
economies in transition, paying particular
attention to the needs of the least developed
countries and small island developing States,
including needs related to capacity-building.
Annex
GUIDING PRINCIPLES FOR THE
PREVENTION, INTRODUCTION AND MITIGATION OF
IMPACTS OF ALIEN SPECIES THAT THREATEN
ECOSYSTEMS, HABITATS OR SPECIES
Introduction
This document provides all Governments and
organizations with guidance for developing
effective strategies to minimize the spread and
impact of invasive alien species. While each
country faces unique challenges and will need to
develop context-specific solutions, the Guiding
Principles give governments clear direction and
a set of goals to aim toward. The extent to
which these Guiding Principles can be
implemented ultimately depends on available
resources. Their purpose is to assist
governments to combat invasive alien species as
an integral component of conservation and
economic development. Because these 15
principles are non-binding, they can be more
readily amended and expanded through the
Convention on Biological Diversity's processes
as we learn more about this problem and its
effective solutions.
According to Article 3 of the Convention on
Biological Diversity, States have, in accordance
with the Charter of the United Nations and the
principles of international law, the sovereign
right to exploit their own resources pursuant to
their own environmental policies, and the
responsibility to ensure that activities within
their jurisdiction or control do not cause
damage to the environment of other States or of
areas beyond the limits of national
jurisdiction.
It should be noted that in the Guiding
Principles below, the terms listed in
footnote(57) are used.
Also, while applying these Guiding
Principles, due consideration must be given to
the fact that ecosystems are dynamic over time
and so the natural distribution of species might
vary without involvement of a human agent.
A. General
Guiding principle 1: Precautionary
approach
Given the unpredictability of the pathways
and impacts on biological diversity of invasive
alien species, efforts to identify and prevent
unintentional introductions as well as decisions
concerning intentional introductions should be
based on the precautionary approach, in
particular with reference to risk analysis, in
accordance with the guiding principles below.
The precautionary approach is that set forth in
principle 15 of the 1992 Rio Declaration on
Environment and Development and in the preamble
of the Convention on Biological Diversity.
The precautionary approach should also be
applied when considering eradication,
containment and control measures in relation to
alien species that have become established. Lack
of scientific certainty about the various
implications of an invasion should not be used
as a reason for postponing or failing to take
appropriate eradication, containment and control
measures.
Guiding principle 2: Three-stage
hierarchical approach
- Prevention is generally far more
cost-effective and environmentally desirable
than measures taken following introduction and
establishment of an invasive alien species.
- Priority should be given to preventing the
introduction of invasive alien species, between
and within States. If an invasive alien species
has been introduced, early detection and rapid
action are crucial to prevent its establishment.
The preferred response is often to eradicate the
organisms as soon as possible (principle 13). In
the event that eradication is not feasible or
resources are not available for its eradication,
containment (principle 14) and long-term control
measures (principle 15) should be implemented.
Any examination of benefits and costs
(environmental, economic and social) should be
done on a long-term basis.
Guiding principle 3: Ecosystem
approach
Measures to deal with invasive alien species
should, as appropriate, be based on the
ecosystem approach, as described in decision V/6
of the Conference of the Parties.
Guiding principle 4: The role of
States
- In the context of invasive alien species,
States should recognize the risk that activities
within their jurisdiction or control may pose to
other States as a potential source of invasive
alien species, and should take appropriate
individual and cooperative actions to minimize
that risk, including the provision of any
available information on invasive behaviour or
invasive potential of a species.
- Examples of such activities include:
- The intentional transfer of an invasive
alien species to another State (even if it is
harmless in the State of origin); and
- The intentional introduction of an alien
species into their own State if there is a risk
of that species subsequently spreading (with or
without a human vector) into another State and
becoming invasive;
- Activities that may lead to unintentional
introductions, even where the introduced species
is harmless in the state of origin.
- To help States minimize the spread and
impact of invasive alien species, States should
identify, as far as possible, species that could
become invasive and make such information
available to other States.
Guiding principle 5: Research and
monitoring
In order to develop an adequate knowledge
base to address the problem, it is important
that States undertake research on and monitoring
of invasive alien species, as appropriate. These
efforts should attempt to include a baseline
taxonomic study of biodiversity. In addition to
these data, monitoring is the key to early
detection of new invasive alien species.
Monitoring should include both targeted and
general surveys, and benefit from the
involvement of other sectors, including local
communities. Research on an invasive alien
species should include a thorough identification
of the invasive species and should document: (a)
the history and ecology of invasion (origin,
pathways and time-period); (b) the biological
characteristics of the invasive alien species;
and (c) the associated impacts at the ecosystem,
species and genetic level and also social and
economic impacts, and how they change over time.
Guiding principle 6: Education and public
awareness
Raising the public's awareness of the
invasive alien species is crucial to the
successful management of invasive alien species.
Therefore, it is important that States should
promote education and public awareness of the
causes of invasion and the risks associated with
the introduction of alien species. When
mitigation measures are required, education and
public-awareness-oriented programmes should be
set in motion so as to engage local communities
and appropriate sector groups in support of such
measures.
B. Prevention
Guiding principle 7: Border control and
quarantine measures
- States should implement border controls and
quarantine measures for alien species that are
or could become invasive to ensure that:
- Intentional introductions of alien species
are subject to appropriate authorization
(principle 10);
- Unintentional or unauthorized introductions
of alien species are minimized.
- States should consider putting in place
appropriate measures to control introductions of
invasive alien species within the State
according to national legislation and policies
where they exist.
- These measures should be based on a risk
analysis of the threats posed by alien species
and their potential pathways of entry. Existing
appropriate governmental agencies or authorities
should be strengthened and broadened as
necessary, and staff should be properly trained
to implement these measures. Early detection
systems and regional and international
coordination are essential to prevention.
Guiding principle 8: Exchange of
information
- States should assist in the development of
an inventory and synthesis of relevant
databases, including taxonomic and specimen
databases, and the development of information
systems and an interoperable distributed network
of databases for compilation and dissemination
of information on alien species for use in the
context of any prevention, introduction,
monitoring and mitigation activities. This
information should include incident lists,
potential threats to neighbouring countries,
information on taxonomy, ecology and genetics of
invasive alien species and on control methods,
whenever available. The wide dissemination of
this information, as well as national, regional
and international guidelines, procedures and
recommendations such as those being compiled by
the Global Invasive Species Programme should
also be facilitated through, inter alia,
the clearing-house mechanism of the Convention
on Biological Diversity.
- The States should provide all relevant
information on their specific import
requirements for alien species, in particular
those that have already been identified as
invasive, and make this information available to
other States.
Guiding principle 9: Cooperation,
including capacity-building
Depending on the situation, a State's
response might be purely internal (within the
country), or may require a cooperative effort
between two or more countries. Such efforts may
include:
- Programmes developed to share information on
invasive alien species, their potential
uneasiness and invasion pathways, with a
particular emphasis on cooperation among
neighbouring countries, between trading
partners, and among countries with similar
ecosystems and histories of invasion. Particular
attention should be paid where trading partners
have similar environments;
- Agreements between countries, on a bilateral
or multilateral basis, should be developed and
used to regulate trade in certain alien species,
with a focus on particularly damaging invasive
species;
- Support for capacity-building programmes for
States that lack the expertise and resources,
including financial, to assess and reduce the
risks and to mitigate the effects when
introduction and establishment of alien species
has taken place. Such capacity-building may
involve technology transfer and the development
of training programmes;
- Cooperative research efforts and funding
efforts toward the identification, prevention,
early detection, monitoring and control of
invasive alien species.
C. Introduction of species
Guiding principle 10: Intentional
introduction
- No first-time intentional introduction or
subsequent introductions of an alien species
already invasive or potentially invasive within
a country should take place without prior
authorization from a competent authority of the
recipient State(s). An appropriate risk
analysis, which may include an environmental
impact assessment, should be carried out as part
of the evaluation process before coming to a
decision on whether or not to authorize a
proposed introduction to the country or to new
ecological regions within a country. States
should make all efforts to permit only those
species that are unlikely to threaten biological
diversity. The burden of proof that a proposed
introduction is unlikely to threaten biological
diversity should be with the proposer of the
introduction or be assigned as appropriate by
the recipient State. Authorization of an
introduction may, where appropriate, be
accompanied by conditions (e.g., preparation of
a mitigation plan, monitoring procedures,
payment for assessment and management, or
containment requirements).
- Decisions concerning intentional
introductions should be based on the
precautionary approach, including within a risk
analysis framework, set forth in principle 15 of
the 1992 Rio Declaration on Environment and
Development, and the preamble of the Convention
on Biological Diversity. Where there is a threat
of reduction or loss of biological diversity,
lack of sufficient scientific certainty and
knowledge regarding an alien species should not
prevent a competent authority from taking a
decision with regard to the intentional
introduction of such alien species to prevent
the spread and adverse impact of invasive alien
species.
Guiding principle 11: Unintentional
introductions
- All States should have in place provisions
to address unintentional introductions (or
intentional introductions that have become
established and invasive). These could include
statutory and regulatory measures and
establishment or strengthening of institutions
and agencies with appropriate responsibilities.
Operational resources should be sufficient to
allow for rapid and effective action.
- Common pathways leading to unintentional
introductions need to be identified and
appropriate provisions to minimize such
introductions should be in place. Sectoral
activities, such as fisheries, agriculture,
forestry, horticulture, shipping (including the
discharge of ballast waters), ground and air
transportation, construction projects,
landscaping, aquaculture including ornamental
aquaculture, tourism, the pet industry and
game-farming, are often pathways for
unintentional introductions. Environmental
impact assessment of such activities should
address the risk of unintentional introduction
of invasive alien species. Wherever appropriate,
a risk analysis of the unintentional
introduction of invasive alien species should be
conducted for these pathways.
D. Mitigation of impacts
Guiding principle 12: Mitigation of
impacts
Once the establishment of an invasive alien
species has been detected, States, individually
and cooperatively, should take appropriate steps
such as eradication, containment and control, to
mitigate adverse effects. Techniques used for
eradication, containment or control should be
safe to humans, the environment and agriculture
as well as ethically acceptable to stakeholders
in the areas affected by the invasive alien
species. Mitigation measures should take place
in the earliest possible stage of invasion, on
the basis of the precautionary approach.
Consistent with national policy or legislation,
an individual or entity responsible for the
introduction of invasive alien species should
bear the costs of control measures and
biological diversity restoration where it is
established that they failed to comply with the
national laws and regulations. Hence, early
detection of new introductions of potentially or
known invasive alien species is important, and
needs to be combined with the capacity to take
rapid follow-up action.
Guiding principle 13: Eradication
Where it is feasible, eradication is often
the best course of action to deal with the
introduction and establishment of invasive alien
species. The best opportunity for eradicating
invasive alien species is in the early stages of
invasion, when populations are small and
localized; hence, early detection systems
focused on high-risk entry points can be
critically useful while post-eradication
monitoring may be necessary. Community support
is often essential to achieve success in
eradication work, and is particularly effective
when developed through consultation.
Consideration should also be given to secondary
effects on biological diversity.
Guiding principle 14: Containment
When eradication is not appropriate, limiting
the spread (containment) of invasive alien
species is often an appropriate strategy in
cases where the range of the organisms or of a
population is small enough to make such efforts
feasible. Regular monitoring is essential and
needs to be linked with quick action to
eradicate any new outbreaks.
Guiding principle 15: Control
Control measures should focus on reducing the
damage caused as well as reducing the number of
the invasive alien species. Effective control
will often rely on a range of integrated
management techniques, including mechanical
control, chemical control, biological control
and habitat management, implemented according to
existing national regulations and international
codes.
* One
representative entered a formal objection during
the process leading to the adoption of this
decision and underlined that he did not believe
that the Conference of the Parties could
legitimatly adopt a motion or a text with a
formal objection in place. A few representatives
expressed reservations regarding the procedure
leading to the adoption of this decision (see
UNEP/CBD/COP/6/20, paras. 294-324).
(49) UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/6/INF/11.
(50) UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/6/6.
(51) UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/6/7.
(52) As distinct from the direct
effects of climate change on species
distribution. (53) See draft
decision UNEP/CBD/COP/6/L.7 (originally
UNEP/CBD/COP/6/WG.I/CRP.4). (54)
UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/INF/6/10.
(55) UNEP/CBD/SBSTTA/6/INF/7.
(56) UNEP/CBD/COP/6/INF/10.
(57) The following definitions
are used:
- "alien species" refers to a species,
subspecies or lower taxon, introduced outside
its natural past or present distribution;
includes any part, gametes, seeds, eggs, or
propagules of such species that might survive
and subsequently reproduce;
- "invasive alien species" means an alien
species whose introduction and/or spread
threaten biological diversity (For the purposes
of the present guiding principles, the term
"invasive alien species" shall be deemed the
same as "alien invasive species" in decision V/8
of the Conference of the Parties to the
Convention on Biological Diversity.);
- "introduction" refers to the movement by
human agency, indirect or direct, of an alien
species outside of its natural range (past or
present). This movement can be either within a
country or between countries or areas beyond
national jurisdiction;
- "intentional introduction" refers to the
deliberate movement and/or release by humans of
an alien species outside its natural range ;
- "unintentional introduction" refers to all
other introductions which are not intentional,
and
- "establishment" refers to the process of an
alien species in a new habitat successfully
producing viable offspring with the likelihood
of continued survival
- "risk analysis" refers to: (1) the
assessment of the consequences of the
introduction and of the likelihood of
establishment of an alien species using
science-based information (i.e., risk
assessment), and (2) to the identification of
measures that can be implemented to reduce or
manage these risks (i.e., risk management),
taking into account socio-economic and cultural
considerations.
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