| Literature DB >> 27549569 |
Regan Early1, Bethany A Bradley2, Jeffrey S Dukes3,4, Joshua J Lawler5, Julian D Olden6, Dana M Blumenthal7, Patrick Gonzalez8,9, Edwin D Grosholz10, Ines Ibañez11, Luke P Miller12, Cascade J B Sorte13, Andrew J Tatem14,15,16.
Abstract
Invasive alien species (IAS) threaten human livelihoods and biodiversity globally. Increasing globalization facilitates IAS arrival, and environmental changes, including climate change, facilitate IAS establishment. Here we provide the first global, spatial analysis of the terrestrial threat from IAS in light of twenty-first century globalization and environmental change, and evaluate national capacities to prevent and manage species invasions. We find that one-sixth of the global land surface is highly vulnerable to invasion, including substantial areas in developing economies and biodiversity hotspots. The dominant invasion vectors differ between high-income countries (imports, particularly of plants and pets) and low-income countries (air travel). Uniting data on the causes of introduction and establishment can improve early-warning and eradication schemes. Most countries have limited capacity to act against invasions. In particular, we reveal a clear need for proactive invasion strategies in areas with high poverty levels, high biodiversity and low historical levels of invasion.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27549569 PMCID: PMC4996970 DOI: 10.1038/ncomms12485
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 14.919
Figure 1Global invasion threat for the twenty-first century.
Airport and seaport capacity, as well as animal, plant and total imports between 2000 and 2009, is combined into global introduction risk. Projected biome shifts and increase in agricultural intensity and fire frequency between 2000 and 2100 (emissions scenario A2) are combined into global establishment threat. Introduction and establishment axes are combined into overall invasion threat (Supplementary Fig. 1). (a) invasion threat, (b) introduction threat, (c) establishment threat, (d) seaport capacity, (e) climate change-driven biome shift, (f) airport capacity and total imports, (g) agricultural increase, (h) animal and plant imports, and (i) fire increase. All maps except (f) and (h) are displayed using the colour scheme from a, which runs from very high (VH; red) to very low (VL; blue). The scale was determined by ranking the threat value in each map grid cell, and binning cells into the following percentiles: 100–90%=very high; 90–80%=high; 80–50%=medium; 50–20%=low; and 20–0%=very low. Maps b and c, composite introduction and establishment threats, were calculated using the highest value of the constituent factors within each grid cell. Maps f and h combine the two named threat variables using the colour scheme defined in each panel. In d, grid cells containing ports are enlarged for visibility.
Figure 2National capacities to respond to the threat of emerging species invasions.
(a) Proactive capacity: comprehensiveness of measures to prevent the introduction of IAS, and the existence of programmes for research, monitoring, and public engagement to tackle IAS threats. (b) the shortfall between threat and proactive capacity calculated by subtracting the threat from Fig. 1a (where VH=5, H=4, M=3, L=2, VL=1) from the capacity value in a. Thus negative values (red) indicate the greatest shortfall. (c) Reactive capacity: extent of knowledge regarding the current national IAS problem and the degree to which a national action plan exists to prioritise and coordinate IAS management activities. (d) the shortfall between threat and reactive capacity calculated by subtracting the threat from Fig. 1a from the capacity value in c. Thus negative values (red) indicate the greatest shortfall.