Abstract

The Global Biodiversity Information Facility (GBIF) is at the moment one of the largest and most widely used biodiversity databases. Nevertheless, there are still some limitations, e.g. in terms of plant species status (native vs. non-native) and geographic resolution of records. At the same time, it is well known that alien plant invasions in inland freshwaters can alter community structure, ecosystem functions and services with significant negative impacts on biodiversity and human activities. We assessed if the GBIF database has a geospatial homogeneous information for native and non-native aquatic plant species for South America and whether or not literature resources not yet digitalized (floras, checklists and other papers) could provide additional information. We selected a set of 40 native and 40 non-native aquatic species. These 80 species included a sub-set of 40 alien species previously evaluated with the USAqWRA scheme (US Aquatic Weed Risk Assessment). Species with non-reliable identification, duplicates of the same collection, records poorly georeferenced were removed from the dataset. New records were manually compiled through classical literature research. All the georeferenced records (GBIF + literature) were used for the mapping and the comparative analysis. As a result, we can conclude that the two datasets provide quite significantly different information and the combination of the two offers new information that would not exist in a single data source. Nevertheless, a careful quality evaluation of the primary information, both in the case of literature and GBIF should be conducted, before the data is used for further analyses.

Highlights

  • In 2016 two important aquatic invasive species conferences occurred

  • The conference has typically involved over 400 participants from over 30 countries from the fields of academia, industry, government, non-government organizations (NGOs) and other stakeholders involved in this issue (Lucy and Panov 2014)

  • The 2nd “Freshwater Invasives – Networking for Strategy II” (FINS-II) Conference was held in Zagreb, Croatia from July 11 to 14, 2016, organised jointly by the University of Zagreb and the European Inland Fisheries and Aquaculture Advisory Commission (EIFAAC)

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Summary

Introduction

In 2016 two important aquatic invasive species conferences occurred. The 19th International Conference on Aquatic Invasive Species (ICAIS) was held in Winnipeg, Canada from April 10 to 14, 2016 and was hosted by the Western Canada Chapter of the International Society for Ecological Restoration (SERWC) (https://www.icais.org/html/previous19.html and http://chapter.ser.org/westerncanada/event/19th-inter national-conference-on-aquatic-invasive-species/). The following sessions were covered: 1) global AIS policy and legislation drivers, 2) outreach, education, and extension, 3) management and control, 4) vectors and pathways, 5) early detection and monitoring, 6) prevention and risk assessment, 7) ballast water, 8) eDNA, 9) species of interest, 10) aquatic plants, 11) Asian carps, 12) other invasive fishes, and 13) dreissenid mussels (http:// www.icais.org/pdf/abstracts_2016.pdf).

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