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For over a century, ships have used water as ballast to provide stability, making ballast water essential to safe and efficient shipping. However, ballast water transports a vast number of aquatic species, including microbes, bacteria, small invertebrates, and algae, as well as the cysts, larvae, and eggs of larger species. When these organisms are discharged with the ballast water into new environments, they are considered aquatic invasive species (AIS). Introduction of invasive species can devastate the local marine ecosystem, causing loss of biodiversity, and even extinctions of native species.
AIS are not just hazardous to the ecosystem. Pathogens carried in ballast water are believed to have caused some cholera outbreaks, costing thousands of lives and many toxic algae blooms appear to be linked to the introduction of non-native algal species through ballast water discharges. AIS carried in ballast water have been implicated in the collapse of fisheries, the devastation of shellfish regions, and toxic conditions on beaches. AIS cost world economies billions of dollars each year. In fact, the spread of invasive species ranks as one of the top four greatest threats to the world’s oceans.
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