Mountain Goats in the Olympic Mountains spread diseases to the native Bighorn Sheep and destroy sensitive vegetation growing on the mountainside.We are probably not going to agree on the 10% of this issue where we differ. In the United States I believe invasive species have increased biodiversity...on balance. There are winners and losers, certainly. On Islands (Hawaii, New Zealand) ok...I generally agree that invasive species can be fairly catastrophic. On continents, in terrestrial environments...I just don’t agree. And I think the urgency in which money and science are used to “correct” the problem is just wrong. Example: Mountain Goats in the Olympic Mountains.
Now I know it is not a popular opinion and one could even argue that it is wrong...what it is not is uninformed. But it is just my opinion. I have almost no influence to affect environmental policy so we should not get to excited about it.
But I like the fact that pythons live in Florida, Banteng are secure in Australia, Dromedaries live as fully wild animals in the Outback, and one can occasionally see Emus along the backroads of Texas. Environments change and species adapt and the movement of species across the planet...wether it is facilitated by continental drift, rafting, wind blown flight, or human transportation is a natural occurrence.
Pythons in Florida are some of the worst invasives out there! Mammals are nearly entirely absent from the Everglades as of now, and this problem will only get worse. Florida Panthers will probably never recover, Red Wolves will never be able to be reintroduced.
I don't much about the Bantengs in Australia but given how sensitive the Australian ecosystems are I can't imagine they are doing any good.
Dromedaries destroy desert vegetation and watering holes.
All of these animals are causing loss in biodiversity, not gain. No matter how 'informed' you claim to be, these opinions really discredit anything you say in my mind.