Invasive alien species (IAS) are a significant and growing problem worldwide. In Europe, some aspects of IAS have been addressed through existing legal instruments, but these are far from sufficient to tackle the problem comprehensively. The FINS II Conference considered the relevance of Top 20 IAS issues (Top 10 threats and opportunities) for Europe determined at the 1st Freshwater Invasiveness – Networking for Strategy (FINS I) conference held in Ireland in 2013. Using a similar format of sequential group voting, threats from FINS I (lack of funding, of awareness and education; poor communication) and several new threats (lack of lead agencies, of standardized management and of common approach; insufficient monitoring and management on private property) were identified by 80 academics, applied scientists, policy makers and stakeholders from 14 EU and three non-EU countries (including 10 invited speakers) during four workshop break-out sessions (legislation remit in both EU/non-EU countries; best management and biosecurity practice for control; data management and early warning; pathways of introductions and citizen science). Identified opportunities include improved cooperation and communication, education and leadership to enhance public awareness and stakeholder participation, systems establishment for early detection, rapid response, monitoring and management of IAS using standardised methods of data collection, storage and usage. The sets of threats and opportunities identified underline the importance of international cooperation on IAS issues in communication, education and funding as priorities, as well as in standardization of legislation, control methods and best practise of research
Single-author papers are the lowest relative contributors to the research output of international open access journals BioInvasions Records (BIR), Aquatic Invasions (AI) and Management of Biological Invasions (MBI), accounting for 5% or less of published papers. In contrast, papers by four or more authors are the highest contributors, accounting for over half of the research output for the three journals. Papers by two or three authors are intermediate between these extremes, accounting for 15-23% of research ouputs. The relative contributions of research papers by single-authors to the output of AI and MBI has also significantly declined over time, while concurrently those by four or more authors has significantly increased. Although not significant, a similar pattern is also evident in BIR. Considering invasion ecology research, factors such as increasing globalisation, the increasing use of transboundary data-sets for invasive species and the proliferation of collaborative multidisciplinary author teams with multiple skill-sets, may be driving single-author papers to extinction.
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Ballast water is a leading vector for the introduction of aquatic invasive species worldwide and, once a novel species is established, regional ballast water exchange between ports can accelerate secondary spread. The importance of shipping induced invasions in the Laurentian Great Lakes has resulted in policies that require more stringent ballast water treatment standards for transoceanic shipping than is required of ships operating regionally within the Great Lakes. As a result, ballast water discharges within the Great Lakes are not well regulated, primarily because of the challenge of treating the high volumes of water carried by vessels that are confined to the waters of the Great Lakes. We used a discrete-time Markov chain model on a network with annual time-steps to simulate ballast water management scenarios at high-priority ports in the Great Lakes shipping network for two potential invaders, golden mussel (Limnoperna fortunei) and monkey goby (Neogobius fluviatilis). We chose high-priority ports by using graph-theoretic network analysis techniques to calculate six network centrality metrics for 151 ports in the network. Ports scoring high in network centrality scores have more ties with other ports or are positioned within the network such that they potentially have greater influence over the secondary spread of aquatic invasive species than other ports. We simulated secondary spread scenarios where hypothetical ballast water treatment was implemented at the top twenty ranked ports in each network centrality metric, as well as the top twenty busiest ports by ship arrivals. The results of each scenario were compared to a scenario where no management action was taken. Simulated secondary spread for both golden mussel and monkey goby resulted in significantly reduced infestation probabilities (p < 0.001) under all management scenarios when compared to unmanaged spread scenarios. Management at ports with inwardly directed ties to other ports reduced infestations by the greatest amount compared to other management scenarios; 65.4% for golden mussel and 74.6% for monkey goby. The indegree centrality of ports in the Great Lakes was found to be an important factor in governing secondary spread. Here we show that prioritized management, like high volume shore based treatment systems based on network centrality, is a potentially effective strategy for impeding the secondary spread of new or localized invasive species in the Great Lakes.
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