BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS: RECOMMENDATIONS FOR U.S. POLICY AND MANAGEMENT
Top Cited Papers
Open Access
- 1 December 2006
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Wiley in Ecological Applications
- Vol. 16 (6), 2035-2054
- https://doi.org/10.1890/1051-0761(2006)016[2035:birfup]2.0.co;2
Abstract
The Ecological Society of America has evaluated current U.S. national policies and practices on biological invasions in light of current scientific knowledge. Invasions by harmful nonnative species are increasing in number and area affected; the damages to ecosystems, economic activity, and human welfare are accumulating. Without improved strategies based on recent scientific advances and increased investments to counter invasions, harm from invasive species is likely to accelerate. Federal leadership, with the cooperation of state and local governments, is required to increase the effectiveness of prevention of invasions, detect and respond quickly to new potentially harmful invasions, control and slow the spread of existing invasions, and provide a national center to ensure that these efforts are coordinated and cost effective. Specifically, the Ecological Society of America recommends that the federal government take the following six actions: (1) Use new information and practices to better manage commercial and other pathways to reduce the transport and release of potentially harmful species; (2) Adopt more quantitative procedures for risk analysis and apply them to every species proposed for importation into the country; (3) Use new cost‐effective diagnostic technologies to increase active surveillance and sharing of information about invasive species so that responses to new invasions can be more rapid and effective; (4) Create new legal authority and provide emergency funding to support rapid responses to emerging invasions; (5) Provide funding and incentives for cost‐effective programs to slow the spread of existing invasive species in order to protect still uninvaded ecosystems, social and industrial infrastructure, and human welfare; and (6) Establish a National Center for Invasive Species Management (under the existing National Invasive Species Council) to coordinate and lead improvements in federal, state, and international policies on invasive species. Recent scientific and technical advances provide a sound basis for more cost‐effective national responses to invasive species. Greater investments in improved technology and management practices would be more than repaid by reduced damages from current and future invasive species. The Ecological Society of America is committed to assist all levels of government and provide scientific advice to improve all aspects of invasive‐species management.Keywords
This publication has 81 references indexed in Scilit:
- Managing invasive species: Rules of thumb for rapid assessmentEcological Economics, 2005
- Invasion risks posed by the aquarium trade and live fish markets on the Laurentian Great LakesBiodiversity and Conservation, 2005
- Beyond ballast water: aquarium and ornamental trades as sources of invasive species in aquatic ecosystemsFrontiers in Ecology and the Environment, 2004
- Alien plants in checklists and floras: towards better communication between taxonomists and ecologistsTaxon, 2004
- Community structure and metabolism through reconstruction of microbial genomes from the environmentNature, 2004
- Role of Ecological History in Invasive Species Management and ConservationConservation Biology, 2004
- Information technology challenges of biodiversity and ecosystems informaticsInformation Systems, 2003
- Nonindigenous Crayfishes Threaten North American Freshwater Biodiversity: Lessons from EuropeFisheries, 2000
- Naturalization and invasion of alien plants: concepts and definitionsDiversity and Distributions, 2000
- Potential of Prokelisia spp. as Biological Control Agents of English Cordgrass, Spartina anglicaBiological Control, 1999