首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
   检索      


Developing a list of invasive alien species likely to threaten biodiversity and ecosystems in the European Union
Authors:Helen E Roy  Sven Bacher  Franz Essl  Tim Adriaens  David C Aldridge  John D D Bishop  Tim M Blackburn  Etienne Branquart  Juliet Brodie  Carles Carboneras  Elizabeth J Cottier-Cook  Gordon H Copp  Hannah J Dean  Jrgen Eilenberg  Belinda Gallardo  Mariana Garcia  Emili García‐Berthou  Piero Genovesi  Philip E Hulme  Marc Kenis  Francis Kerckhof  Marianne Kettunen  Dan Minchin  Wolfgang Nentwig  Ana Nieto  Jan Pergl  Oliver L Pescott  Jodey M Peyton  Cristina Preda  Alain Roques  Steph L Rorke  Riccardo Scalera  Stefan Schindler  Karsten Schnrogge  Jack Sewell  Wojciech Solarz  Alan J A Stewart  Elena Tricarico  Sonia Vanderhoeven  Gerard van der Velde  Montserrat Vil  Christine A Wood  Argyro Zenetos  Wolfgang Rabitsch
Institution:Helen E. Roy,Sven Bacher,Franz Essl,Tim Adriaens,David C. Aldridge,John D. D. Bishop,Tim M. Blackburn,Etienne Branquart,Juliet Brodie,Carles Carboneras,Elizabeth J. Cottier-Cook,Gordon H. Copp,Hannah J. Dean,Jørgen Eilenberg,Belinda Gallardo,Mariana Garcia,Emili García‐Berthou,Piero Genovesi,Philip E. Hulme,Marc Kenis,Francis Kerckhof,Marianne Kettunen,Dan Minchin,Wolfgang Nentwig,Ana Nieto,Jan Pergl,Oliver L. Pescott,Jodey M. Peyton,Cristina Preda,Alain Roques,Steph L. Rorke,Riccardo Scalera,Stefan Schindler,Karsten Schönrogge,Jack Sewell,Wojciech Solarz,Alan J. A. Stewart,Elena Tricarico,Sonia Vanderhoeven,Gerard van der Velde,Montserrat Vilà,Christine A. Wood,Argyro Zenetos,Wolfgang Rabitsch
Abstract:The European Union (EU) has recently published its first list of invasive alien species (IAS) of EU concern to which current legislation must apply. The list comprises species known to pose great threats to biodiversity and needs to be maintained and updated. Horizon scanning is seen as critical to identify the most threatening potential IAS that do not yet occur in Europe to be subsequently risk assessed for future listing. Accordingly, we present a systematic consensus horizon scanning procedure to derive a ranked list of potential IAS likely to arrive, establish, spread and have an impact on biodiversity in the region over the next decade. The approach is unique in the continental scale examined, the breadth of taxonomic groups and environments considered, and the methods and data sources used. International experts were brought together to address five broad thematic groups of potential IAS. For each thematic group the experts first independently assembled lists of potential IAS not yet established in the EU but potentially threatening biodiversity if introduced. Experts were asked to score the species within their thematic group for their separate likelihoods of i) arrival, ii) establishment, iii) spread, and iv) magnitude of the potential negative impact on biodiversity within the EU. Experts then convened for a 2‐day workshop applying consensus methods to compile a ranked list of potential IAS. From an initial working list of 329 species, a list of 66 species not yet established in the EU that were considered to be very high (8 species), high (40 species) or medium (18 species) risk species was derived. Here, we present these species highlighting the potential negative impacts and the most likely biogeographic regions to be affected by these potential IAS.
Keywords:biological invasions  consensus approach  environmental policy  impacts  introductions  prioritization  risk assessment
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号