HC Deb 14 December 1995 vol 268 cc722-3W
Mr. Morley

To ask the Secretary of State for the Environment if he will list all non-native species of birds, animals, fish and crustacean which(a) have established and (b) are suspected of having established a breeding population in the United Kingdom since 1945. [5552]

Mr. Clappison

[holding answer 13 December 1995]: The following species of bird, mammal, reptile and amphibian, and crustacea are thought to have been introduced since 1945 and are suspected of having established breeding populations. Introductions of all non-native freshwater fish species appear to have occurred before 1945. The Government's statutory scientific adviser, the Joint Nature Conservation Committee, indicates that other species are likely to have briefly established populations since 1945 but have now become extinct. Due to recording techniques and only the fleeting presence of some of these species, data are not readily available.

Birds Animals (note some do not have common names) Reptiles and amphibians Crustacea (note some do not have common names)
Ruddy duck American mink Alpine newt North American
Ring-necked Pere Davids African clawed signal crayfish
Parakeet deer toad Turkish crayfish
Bar-headed Sea anenonies Fire-bellied Noble crayfish
goose and corals: toad Red swamp crayfish
Muscovy Rhizogeton Metatrichoniscoides
duck1 nudum leydigi
Snow goose Clavopsella (a woodlouse)
Swan goose navis Asellus
Barnacle goose1 Anguillicola communis
Red-crested crassus (a freshwater
Pochard (nematode woodlouse)
white-fronted worm) Gammarus
goose1 Bristle worms: tigrinus
Lesser white- Goniadella (a shrimp)
fronted gracilis Arcitalitrus
goose1 Hydroides dorrieni
Night heron1M ezoensis
Hydroides
dianthus
Janua
brasiliensis
Pileolaria
berkeleyana
Marenzelleria
viridis
Ammothea
hilgendorfi
(Sea spider
Molluscs:
Rapana venosa
Crassostrea gigas
Tiostrea lutaria
Aulacomya ater
Ensis americanus
Styela clava
(sea-squirt)
1These species occur naturally in the United Kingdom as vagrants or regular winter visitors, but their breeding populations are thought to be due largely to escapes or releases from captivity i.e. they are not native breeding species.