| Literature DB >> 28350387 |
Ellie E Dyer1,2, David W Redding2, Tim M Blackburn1,2,3,4.
Abstract
The introduction of species to locations where they do not naturally occur (termed aliens) can have far-reaching and unpredictable environmental and economic consequences. Therefore there is a strong incentive to stem the tide of alien species introduction and spread. In order to identify broad patterns and processes of alien invasions, a spatially referenced, global dataset on the historical introductions and alien distributions of a complete taxonomic group is required. Here we present the Global Avian Invasions Atlas (GAVIA)-a new spatial and temporal dataset comprising 27,723 distribution records for 971 alien bird species introduced to 230 countries and administrative areas spanning the period 6000BCE-AD2014. GAVIA was initiated to provide a unified database of records on alien bird introductions, incorporating records from all stages of invasion, including introductions that have failed as well as those that have succeeded. GAVIA represents the most comprehensive resource on the global distribution of alien species in any major taxon, allowing the spatial and temporal dynamics of alien bird distributions to be examined.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28350387 PMCID: PMC5369319 DOI: 10.1038/sdata.2017.41
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Data ISSN: 2052-4463 Impact factor: 6.444
Figure 1The 8 biogeographical realms used in Olson et al.[17], and which were followed by GAVIA for the purposes of assigning alien ranges to realms.
The first number is the number of records in GAVIA for each realm, and the number in brackets is the number of species recorded as being introduced in each realm.
Data fields in GAVIA.
| ‘Field Name’ shows the GAVIA column headings, ‘Field Type’ denotes what kind of data entry is possible for that field, and ‘Description of Contents’ describes what kind of information is recorded in that field. For Field Type, an ‘Autofill box’ is one which is filled in automatically once a new record is created. For example, each new record is awarded its own unique ID number which cannot be chosen or edited. When a binomial is selected, the respective unique species ID and common name boxes are also automatically filled in and cannot be changed or edited unless a new binomial is selected. A ‘Look-up table’ field type means that the information in that box has been selected from an embedded table, for example the taxonomic list or the GADM country list. In other words there are a finite number of selections from which to choose, and the contents of these cells cannot deviate from the contents of the respective look-up tables. A ‘Free Text’ or ‘Free Number’ box means that the data compiler can freely enter whatever text or number that they wish. A tick box provides the compiler with a certain number of selections, for example island type, and the compiler then ticks the relevant box. An ‘EndNote citation code’ relates to the full references recorded in the GAVIA EndNote reference list. | ||
|---|---|---|
| RecordID | Autofill box | A unique number for that particular record. Each corresponding individual map also carries this number. This number never changes, even if previous records are deleted. |
| SpeciesID | Autofill box | A unique number for each individual species. |
| Order | Autofill box | The Order to which the species belongs, as per the taxonomy accepted by the IUCN and BirdLife. |
| Family | Autofill box | The Family to which the species belongs, as per the taxonomy accepted by the IUCN and BirdLife. |
| Genus | Autofill box | The genus of that species, as per the taxonomy accepted by the IUCN and BirdLife. |
| Species | Autofill box | The species name of that species, as per the taxonomy accepted by the IUCN and BirdLife. |
| Binomial | Look-up table | The binomial of that species, as per the taxonomy accepted by the IUCN and BirdLife. |
| CommonName | Autofill box | The common name of that species, as per the IUCN and BirdLife. |
| CountryName | Look-up table | The name of the country in which that record occurs as per the GADM designations. |
| AreaName1 | Look-up table | The first sub-level down from country, e.g. region/state, in which that record occurs, as per the GADM designations. |
| AreaName2 | Look-up table | The second sub-level down from country, e.g. sub-region/city, in which that record occurs, as per the GADM designations. |
| LocationDescription | Free text box | A specific description of where the record occurs, if it cannot be selected from Area Name 1 or 2. |
| Realm | Look-up table | The biogeographical realm in which that record occurs, as per the Olson |
| Island | True/False | Whether the record occurs on an island or not. |
| LandType | Look-up table | The type of land that the record occurs on, choices being mainland, continental island or oceanic island. |
| CPrecord | True/False | Whether the record represents a colonisation pressure (CP) location, i.e. a specific location where the species was introduced for the first time, as opposed to a location to which the species has spread. |
| IntroducedDate | Free text box | The date that the species was first introduced (if known), written exactly as found in the reference, e.g. ‘late 17th century’. |
| IntroducedDateGrouped | Free number box | The date that the species was first introduced (if known), converted to a number, e.g. ‘late 17th century’ would become 1690. Guidelines were produced to aid this, so that all transformations were consistent ( |
| MappingDate | Free number box | The date that the map which corresponds to that particular record represents. For example, the introduced date will stay the same for all individual records from that reference, but as the species spreads over time, the mapped date will change to reflect the newly colonised areas. If there are no dates mentioned at all within the reference, then the date that the reference was published is used as the default mapping date. |
| ReferenceDate | Free number box | Rarely used. If there is no date of introduction recorded, but the reference referred to is a significantly ‘old’ date, then this is recorded so that it is at least an indication of how long the species has been present in that region. |
| StatusCat | Look-up table | The status of the species in that record, e.g. established, died out etc. ( |
| IntroMethod | Look-up table | How the species was introduced. For example it was released, or it escaped etc. |
| IntroPurpose | Look-up table | Why the species was introduced. For example it escaped from a zoo, or was released for hunting purposes. |
| TaxonomicNotes | Free text box | Any taxonomic information relevant to that record. |
| Notes | Free text box | Relevant additional notes relating to the record that cannot be entered by using one of the above fields, e.g. it might specify numbers of birds released, or specific paths of species spread etc. |
| RangeMap | Free text box | Whether or not the record has a corresponding distribution map. Either Mapped or Not Mapped. If Not Mapped, it means that it will never be mapped, as the data is deemed too broad scale or vague. |
| Reference | EndNote citation code | Where the information was found, this links to the full list of GAVIA references (Data citation 1). |
| CompilerInitial | Look-up table | The initials of the person responsible for compiling that record in the database. |
Definitions of alien status categories in GAVIA.
| Established | The species has formed self-sustaining populations in the area of introduction |
| Breeding | The species is known to be breeding/have bred in the area of introduction, but is not thought to be self-sustaining |
| Unsuccessful | The species has not formed self-sustaining populations (casual, incidental) |
| Died Out | The species was once established but has now completely died out in the area of introduction. |
| Extirpated | The species was once established but has now been actively exterminated in the area of introduction. |
| Unknown | The status of the species in the area of introduction is not known and further clarification is necessary to determine which of the other five categories is appropriate. |
Guidelines used for converting the introduced date given in the reference into a whole number.
| 1912 | 1912 | Use the four digit number as given |
| c.1890 | 1890 | Use the four digit number given |
| 1777–1778 | 1777 | Use the earliest date in the range |
| 1930–1940 | 1935 | Use the midpoint of the range |
| C18th | 1750 | Use the midpoint of the century |
| early C18th | 1710 | Use the date 10 years into the century |
| mid C18th | 1750 | Use the midpoint of the century |
| late C18th | 1790 | Use the date 10 years before the end of the century |
| 1800s | 1850 | Use the midpoint of the century |
| c.1800s | 1850 | Use the midpoint of the century |
| 1990s | 1995 | Use the midpoint of the decade |
| early 1700s | 1710 | Use the date 10 years into the century |
| mid 1700s | 1750 | Use the midpoint of the century |
| late 1700s | 1790 | Use the date 10 years before the end of the century |
| early 1990s | 1991 | Use the first year of the decade |
| mid 1990s | 1995 | Use the midpoint of the decade |
| late 1990s | 1999 | Use the last year before the end of the decade |
| 1980s–1990s | 1990 | Use the midpoint of the two decades |
| <1965 | 1964 | Use the date immediately before the date given |
| >1970 | 1971 | Use the date immediately after the date given |
Figure 2The global distribution of those records in GAVIA that contain sufficient information to have been converted into distribution maps (dark grey).
These include all status categories, so introductions that have both succeeded and failed. Light grey areas are mainly those for which there are no records of introduction (or in a few cases, records that could not be mapped), although whether it is actually the case that no alien birds have been introduced to these places (versus a lack of records) is unknown.
Figure 3Temporal patterns of accumulation of records in GAVIA.
Cumulative increase in (a) the number of records; (b) the number of species recorded; and (c) both the number of records and species plotted together. Light grey is the number of records, dark grey is the number of species.
Figure 4The number of records in GAVIA assigned to each introduction status, in each of the eight biogeographic regions.