Abstract

Assessment of the ecological and economic/societal impacts of the introduction of non-indigenous species (NIS) is one of the primary focus areas of bioinvasion science in terrestrial and aquatic environments, and is considered essential to management. A classification system of NIS, based on the magnitude of their environmental impacts, was recently proposed to assist management. Here, we consider the potential application of this classification scheme to the marine environment, and offer a complementary framework focussing on value sets in order to explicitly address marine management concerns. Since existing data on marine NIS impacts are scarce and successful marine removals are rare, we propose that management of marine NIS adopt a precautionary approach, which not only would emphasise preventing new incursions through pre-border and at-border controls but also should influence the categorisation of impacts. The study of marine invasion impacts requires urgent attention and significant investment, since we lack the luxury of waiting for the knowledge base to be acquired before the window of opportunity closes for feasible management.

Highlights

  • They concluded that evidence for most of the reported ecosystem impacts is weak, as it is based on expert judgement or dubious correlations; only 13% of the reported impacts were inferred from manipulative or natural experiments

  • Zaiko and colleagues [44] found that ecological impacts had been documented for 36% of the known non-indigenous species (NIS) and cryptogenic species in the Baltic Sea

  • We developed such a matrix for NIS impacts, with the value sets and approach outlined in Box 2 and impact thresholds and exemplars provided in S1 Table

Read more

Summary

OPEN ACCESS

JCC holds a FCT post-doctoral grant (SFRH/BPD/75775/2011). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript

Data Availability Limits the Utility of an Impact Classification System
Alternative Impact Evaluation Frameworks for Management
Findings
Conclusions
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call