The Harlequin Ladybird
The most invasive ladybird on Earth has arrived in
When the Harlequin was first reported in England specialists warned that some of our more unusual species of ladybird could disappear within ten years, but it’s not only the rarer species now under threat, all are endangered. Harlequins tend to aggregate in winter and hibernate in dwellings, tens of thousands have been found in people’s homes waiting for favourable conditions to breed and hence go forth to make possible their conquest.
If the inexorable advancement of the Harlequin is not contained it could decimate our butterfly and moth population, it also bites humans and damages soft fruit, in short it’s an unfriendly pest. Organisation Buglife Scotland a conservation trust is intensely concerned about the situation and has called for government action to eradicate the ladybird. Their aims are threefold.
1. If at all possible, to exterminate the Harlequin ladybird.
2. To join American research efforts to find a long-term solution to the problem.
3. To work in the EU to secure better bio-security for the continent.
The case of the Harlequin ladybird, however, is not a unique occurrence. Many examples abound where the introduction of a new or alien species, accidental or deliberate, has been ecologically devastating to the native residents.
Another problem plant is New Zealand Pigmy Weed (Crassula helmsii), which is semi-aquatic. Just a minute fragment of this virulent species can regrow and multiply into a dense mat of vegetation. When introduced to a site it becomes the dominant species within three to five years destroying bio-diversity and choking up ponds and waterways. The cost of removing Crassula from ponds in the
Could there be a correspondence emerging here? Often within the science of Ecology in general and Population Dynamics in particular there is a remarkable tendency to leave mankind out of the picture. The examples above illustrate what inevitably occurs when there is competition for resources and territory, yet our theories and hypotheses are seldom directed towards ourselves. We evolved through natural selection just like ladybirds, squirrels and bluebells and therefore cannot be left out of the equation. We are subject to the same forces and behavioural predispositions. What is happening all around us all the time in the ‘animal and plant kingdom’ is happening to us too. We, the native population, are under threat from dwindling resources, lack of space, disease and dilution of the gene pool. Whilst remedial action is undertaken to some extent on behalf of other species there appears to be no such assistance for our native variety of Homo sapiens. We must mobilise before it’s too late… join the BNP now to battle trespassers, invaders and embryonic dominant species.
Elizabeth
2 comments:
An interesting article, Elizabeth! Your analogies are compelling.
At least we can be thankful
Grey squirrels dont explode on trains
Post a Comment