Socioeconomic legacy yields an invasion debt
DULLINGER, Stefan
Vienna Institute for Nature Conservation and Analyses [VINCA]
Universität Wien = University of Vienna
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Vienna Institute for Nature Conservation and Analyses [VINCA]
Universität Wien = University of Vienna
DULLINGER, Stefan
Vienna Institute for Nature Conservation and Analyses [VINCA]
Universität Wien = University of Vienna
Vienna Institute for Nature Conservation and Analyses [VINCA]
Universität Wien = University of Vienna
HÜLBER, Karl
Vienna Institute for Nature Conservation and Analyses [VINCA]
Universität Wien = University of Vienna
< Reduce
Vienna Institute for Nature Conservation and Analyses [VINCA]
Universität Wien = University of Vienna
Language
en
Article de revue
This item was published in
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 2011, vol. 108, n° 1, p. 203-207
National Academy of Sciences
English Abstract
Globalization and economic growth are widely recognized as important drivers of biological invasions. Consequently, there is an increasing need for governments to address the role of international trade in their strategies ...Read more >
Globalization and economic growth are widely recognized as important drivers of biological invasions. Consequently, there is an increasing need for governments to address the role of international trade in their strategies to prevent species introductions. However, many of the most problematic alien species are not recent arrivals but were introduced several decades ago. Hence, current patterns of alien-species richness may better reflect historical rather than contemporary human activities, a phenomenon which might be called “invasion debt.” Here, we show that across 10 taxonomic groups (vascular plants, bryophytes, fungi, birds, mammals, reptiles, amphibians, fish, terrestrial insects, and aquatic invertebrates) in 28 European countries, current numbers of alien species established in the wild are indeed more closely related to indicators of socioeconomic activity from the year 1900 than to those from 2000, although the majority of species introductions occurred during the second half of the 20th century. The strength of the historical signal varies among taxonomic groups, with those possessing good capabilities for dispersal (birds, insects) more strongly associated with recent socioeconomic drivers. Nevertheless, our results suggest a considerable historical legacy for the majority of the taxa analyzed. The consequences of the current high levels of socioeconomic activity on the extent of biological invasions will thus probably not be completely realized until several decades into the future.Read less <
Keywords
RICHESSE DES ESPÈCES
ESPÈCE EXOTIQUE
English Keywords
EXOTIC PLANTS AND ANIMALS
SPECIES ESTABLISHMENT
TIME LAG
Origin
Hal imported