inspiring collaborations: sharing information on invasive non-native species across britain and...
TRANSCRIPT
Inspiring collaborations:
sharing information on invasive
non-native species across
Britain and beyond
Helen Roy and many moreThe Macroecology of Alien Species: Patterns, Drivers and Consequences
of Global Biotic Exchange. Durham University, 24-26th July 2017
Climate and invasion = deadly duo?
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INNS cost Europe
>12 billion € / year(based on documented impact of 125 IAS out of over thousand considered as invasive in Europe)
Need for large-scale data on invasions
Chapman D, Purse B V, Roy H E, Bullock J M. Global trade networks determine the distribution of invasive non-native species. Global Ecol Biogeogr. 2017;00:1–11.
Tracking invasions
Harmonia axyridis
A system to address invasive alien species should be
underpinned by a centralised information system collating the
existing information on alien species in the Union and
allowing access to information on the presence of species,
their spread, their ecology, invasion history and all other
information necessary to underpin policy and management
decisions and allowing also the exchange of best practices.
Documenting invasions - GBNNSIP
Scorecard 2017 for Great Britain
• 1501 established non-native plants
• 467 established non-native animals
• 272 established invasive non-native species:
– 100 (6.7%) established non-native plants
– 170 (36.4%) established non-native animals
Roy et al. (2014) Biological InvasionsRoy et al. (2015) Biological Journal of Linnean Society
Invertebrate invasions over time
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Nysius huttoni
Vespa velutina
Orientus ishidae
Blatta orientalis
First record: 1600
Plagiolepis alluaudi
First record: 1896
Eriosoma lanigerum
First record: 1787
Where are all the microbes?
The list excluded garden plants, cultivated
crops, pests of stored crops, human
parasites and pests of human habitation
unless they were thought likely to be found
in the wild. Microorganism (with the
exception of a small number of
marine phytoplankton) and
macrofungi were also not included.
Mapping pathways
Other alien species High-impact IAS
a) Taxonomic groups
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Plants n=458
Verteb. n=1633
Inverteb. n=191
Algae n=10
Fungi n=6
Other n=17
Pe
rcen
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e o
f sp
ec
ies
intentional unintentional both
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Plants n=35
Verteb. n=31
Inverteb. n=24
Algae n=2
Fungi n=3
Other n=4
Pe
rcen
tag
e o
f sp
ec
ies
intentional unintentional both
b) Environments
Other alien species High-impact IAS
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terrestrial n=64
freshwater n=13
marine n=6
multiple n=16
Pe
rcen
tag
e o
f s
pe
cie
s
intentional unintentional both
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terrestrial n=840
freshwater n=638
marine n=478
multiple n=355
Pe
rcen
tag
e o
f s
pe
cie
s
intentional unintentional both
Saul et al. (in press)
Journal of Applied
Ecology
Variation in the importance of pathways
Essl et al. (2015) Crossing frontiers in
tackling pathways of biological
invasions. Bioscience: biv082
Predicting invasions through horizon scanning
7 out of top 10 species have arrived
GB Top 10 – Asian hornet
Vespa velutina
Terrestrial predator
Native to China
Arrived in pottery
consignment
Bordeaux, France in
2004
Asian Hornet Watch
Citizen science and alien species
For many countries, the efficiency of invasion monitoring can be improved by inclusion into pre-
existing biodiversity monitoring schemes. Countries may capitalize on citizen
science, as well as emerging online and remote technologies in data
capture to improve records of invasions. For all countries the goal should be to
provide at regular intervals (at least every five years) alien species occurrence data corresponding
to their maximum level of resolution, be it for the national inventory, priority sites, spatial extent, or
the national distribution of occurrence of a priority set of taxa.
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Nu
mb
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Harmonia axyridis records over time
BR
C e
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Coccin
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ecord
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chem
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mb
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La
dyb
ird
Su
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Harlequin
ladybir
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arr
ives
iRecord
La
dybir
ds
ap
p
On-line recording
Biological record
Database
Expert verifier
Record verified?NoYes
Stakeholders
informed
Action
Alien Alerts
Transport Introduction EstablishmentSpread
Prevention Eradication
Containment Mitigation
Managem
ent
Invasio
n
Sta
ge
Min
imum
sta
ndard
s 1. Basic species description and overview
2. Likelihood of invasion
3. Likelihood of invasion
4. Assessment of introduction pathways
5. Assessment of impacts on
biodiversity and ecosystems
6. Assessment of impact
on ecosystem services
7. Assessment of socio-
economic impacts
8. Consideration of status (threatened or protected) of
species or habitat under threat
10. Data limitations
11. Documents information sources
12. Provides a summary in a consistent and
interpretable form
13. Includes uncertainty
14. Includes quality assurance
Minimum standards for risk assessment
• Evidence for ecosystem service impacts
• Consideration of climate change
• Socio-economic benefits
LIFE15 PRE FR 001
Mitigating the threat of invasive alien plants to the EU through pest risk
analysis to support the Regulation 1143/2014
Summary
• Importance of
global
collaborations
• Sharing information
• Engaging people
• Predicting
invasions
Thank you
Trevor Renals