Abstract

The potential invasiveness of alien macroinvertebrate species in the Italian/Swiss hydrographic system of Lake Maggiore (NW Italy) was assessed through the Aquatic Species Invasiveness Screening Kit, a risk assessment tool developed for quantifying the impacts of alien species on the commercial, environmental, and species traits sectors. Data were collected using the databases provided by two regional environmental agencies in northern Italy (Lombardy and Piedmont regions) and by the governmental monitoring program of Switzerland, which were integrated with a systematic literature search on Google scholar and ISI Web of Science. In the assessment area, 16 macroinvertebrate invasive alien species were reported: nine mollusks, four decapods, and three amphipods. The species assessment indicated seven species with a high level of invasiveness: Procambarus clarkii, Faxonius limosus (formerly, Orconectes limosus) and Pacifastacus leniusculus, Dreissena polymorpha, Corbicula fluminea, Sinanodonta woodiana, and Pseudosuccinea columella. The results allow invasive species managers to understand which species to focus their monitoring on in the near future in order to track IAS movements and limit their spread within the hydrographic system and to provide the identification and refinement of concerted bilateral strategies aimed at limiting the impacts of these species. They also account for the implications of future climate change on the invasion potential of each species.

Highlights

  • Published: 8 November 2021Invasive alien species (IAS) affect all ecosystems around the world, and they are recognized as a serious threat to biodiversity

  • Invasive species are driven by human activities, so solutions to these problems are only possible with a change in human behavior

  • The management of IAS and their pathways of introduction are the main core of EU regulation 1143/2014

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Summary

Introduction

Invasive alien species (IAS) affect all ecosystems around the world, and they are recognized as a serious threat to biodiversity. Their increasing number worldwide is strongly linked to international trade, which represents the most significant component among human-mediated introductions [1]. The ecological, economic, and social impacts of IAS are well known, and this is especially true for those that cause direct or indirect problems to human beings [2,3,4]. To address the problem of biological invasions effectively, it is important to understand which biological and ecological traits of alien species may favor the colonization of a new environment. It is important to analyze factors such as invasion history, the possible

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