| PRESIDENT CLINTON EXPANDS FEDERAL EFFORT TO COMBAT INVASIVE SPECIES  			 	WASHINGTON, February 3, 1999 - President Clinton today is signing an  executive order to coordinate a federal strategy to address the growing  environmental and economic threat of invasive species, plants and animals  that are not native to the United States.    	Agriculture Secretary Dan Glickman, Interior Secretary Bruce  Babbitt, and Commerce Under Secretary James Baker told a news conference  that the order creates an Invasive Species Council.  The Council will  develop a comprehensive plan to minimize the economic, ecological, and  human health impacts of invasive species and determine further steps to  prevent the introduction and spread of invasive species.  The Council, to  be chaired by Glickman, Babbitt, and Commerce Secretary William Daley,  will work in cooperation with a variety of groups, including states,  tribes, scientists, universities, environmental groups, farm  organizations, shipping interests, and the business community.     	"This is a unified, all-out battle against unwanted plant and  animal pests that threaten to wreak major economic and environmental  havoc," said Glickman.  "Asian long-horned beetles destroy trees.  Leafy  spurge reduces the productivity of grazing land by 50 to 75 percent.   Zebra mussels clog water intake pipes, shutting down electrical  utilities.  These are serious threats."       	"There are a lot of global bioinvasive hitchhikers, and now is  the time to take action," said Babbitt.  "The costs to habitat and the  economy are racing out of control.  New resources are needed now, and  this order opens the door to accomplish just that."     	"This executive order is good news for our ongoing fight against  the invasion of marine alien species.  The ocean serves as a highway in  transporting these invasive species into U.S. waters," said Baker.   "Every minute 40,000 gallons of foreign ballast water is dumped into U.S.  harbors -- this water contains a multitude of non-indigenous organism  which could alter or destroy America's natural marine ecosystems."     	President Clinton's budget for fiscal year 2000, released on  Monday, proposes an increase of more than $28.8 million in funding to  combat invasive species.  This includes new funding for combating exotic  pests and diseases as well as accelerating research on habitat  restoration and biologically-based integrated pest management tactics.     	Many ecologists believe the spread of exotic species constitutes  one of the most serious, yet least appreciated, threats to biodiversity.   Invasive plants inflict a heavy toll on American agriculture, reducing  the quality and raising the cost of food, feed, and fiber.  Experts  estimate that invasive plants already infest over 100 million acres.   Three million acres, an area twice the size of Delaware, is lost to  invasive plants each year.  The total economic impact of invasive species  on the U.S. economy is estimated to be about $123 billion annually.  Some  examples       	The zebra mussel can shut down electrical utilities by clogging  water intake pipes and threatens to cause an estimated $5  billion in damages by 2002, if left unchecked.    	Leafy spurge causes more than $144 million in livestock  forage damage each year in Montana, North Dakota, South Dakota,  and Wyoming.    	Invading sea lampreys caused the collapse of lake trout and  other Great Lakes fisheries, costing the U.S. and Canada $13  million annually to control.    	The brown tree snake has caused over 200 snake bites, 1200  electrical outages and the extinction of most native forest birds  on Guam.    	When the Asian long-horned beetle infested Brooklyn, New York,  more than 2000 trees had to be destroyed, costing the federal and  state government more than $5 million.  A similar infestation now  plagues Chicago.     	Today's announcement signals an expanded effort to combat invasive  species.  The President's order directs federal agencies to use  their authority to prevent the introduction of invasive species and  to restore native species.  It directs the new interagency Council  to come up with an detailed invasive species management plan within  18 months.     	Federal officials were joined at today's announcement by eminent  Harvard biologist E.O. Wilson.  Other scientists who have led calls  for stronger federal action to combat invasive species include  James T. Carlton of Williams College; Don C. Schmitz of the Florida  Department of Environmental Protection; Daniel Simberloff, the  Nancy Gore Hunger Professor of Excellence in Environmental Science  at the University of Tennessee; and Phyllis N. Windle, author of a  Congressional report on invasive species.     	Aggressive federal actions are already underway, including  measures to prevent entry of invasive species, eradicate invasive  species before establishment, control invasive species once  established, and conduct outreach and education for the general  public.  These actions include       			 	To prevent entry of invasive species, USDA has over 1300  inspectors stationed at more than 90 ports of entry inspecting  shipments moving into the U.S.  The inspectors are assisted in some  ports by the Beagle Brigade, a group of dogs trained to sniff out  prohibited agricultural products.    	USDA has prohibited the importation of untreated wood packing  material from China, which have previously carried the Asian  long-horned beetle into the United States  and is considering  extending this ban to other countries.    	The U.S Fish and Wildlife Service will build a barrier this spring  in the Chicago Ship Canal to prevent the spread of invasive species  between the Great Lakes and the Mississippi River basins.    	The Interior Department is spending $4.5 million annually to prevent  the spread of the brown tree snake from Guam.    	The National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) and other  federal and state agencies are working to restore the natural ecology of  the South Florida and Everglades ecosystems.  As this massive replumbing  gets underway, NOAA has made it clear to its Federal and state partners  that safeguards must be taken to ensure that the new water flows do not  become highways for exotic species to be transported through Florida's  fragile environment.  	NOAA is sponsoring research on new technologies for treatment of  ballast water to reduce the treat of foreign organisms being discharged  into U.S. waters.     	The Department of Defense is an active participant in a comprehensive  effort to control the brown tree snake on Guam and to prevent its further  spread.  Key elements are an extensive control program on Guam, continued  support of research efforts to develop new control measures, and  participation in Oahu's island-wide surveillance and response plan. 	  	The Federal Interagency Committee for the Management of Noxious and  Exotic Weeds collaborated on research and publication of a comprehensive  fact book on invasive plants.    
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