Clarke Stacey A, Vilizzi Lorenzo, Lee Laura, Wood Louisa E, Cowie Winston J, Burt John A, Mamiit Rusyan J E, Ali Hassina, Davison Phil I, Fenwick Gemma V, Harmer Rogan, Skóra Michał E, Kozic Sebastian, Aislabie Luke R, Kennerley Adam, Le Quesne Will J F, Copp Gordon H, Stebbing Paul D
Centre for Environment, Fisheries and Aquaculture Science, Lowestoft, UK.
Department of Ecology and Vertebrate Zoology, Faculty of Biology and Environmental Protection, University of Łódź, Łódź, Poland.
Glob Chang Biol. 2020 Apr;26(4):2081-2092. doi: 10.1111/gcb.14964. Epub 2020 Feb 4.
Invasive non-native species (NNS) are internationally recognized as posing a serious threat to global biodiversity, economies and human health. The identification of invasive NNS is already established, those that may arrive in the future, their vectors and pathways of introduction and spread, and hotspots of invasion are important for a targeted approach to managing introductions and impacts at local, regional and global scales. The aim of this study was to identify which marine and brackish NNS are already present in marine systems of the northeastern Arabia area (Arabian Gulf and Sea of Oman) and of these which ones are potentially invasive, and which species have a high likelihood of being introduced in the future and negatively affect biodiversity. Overall, 136 NNS were identified, of which 56 are already present in the region and a further 80 were identified as likely to arrive in the future, including fish, tunicates, invertebrates, plants and protists. The Aquatic Species Invasiveness Screening Kit (AS-ISK) was used to identify the risk of NNS being (or becoming) invasive within the region. Based on the AS-ISK basic risk assessment (BRA) thresholds, 36 extant and 37 horizon species (53.7% of all species) were identified as high risk. When the impact of climate change on the overall assessment was considered, the combined risk score (BRA+CCA) increased for 38.2% of all species, suggesting higher risk under warmer conditions, including the highest-risk horizon NNS the green crab Carcinus maenas, and the extant macro-alga Hypnea musciformis. This is the first horizon-scanning exercise for NNS in the region, thus providing a vital baseline for future management. The outcome of this study is the prioritization of NNS to inform decision-making for the targeted monitoring and management in the region to prevent new bio-invasions and to control existing species, including their potential for spread.
入侵性非本地物种(NNS)在国际上被公认为对全球生物多样性、经济和人类健康构成严重威胁。入侵性非本地物种的识别工作已经开展,那些未来可能抵达的物种、其引入和传播的媒介及途径,以及入侵热点地区,对于在地方、区域和全球范围内有针对性地管理物种引入和影响至关重要。本研究的目的是确定阿拉伯半岛东北部地区(阿拉伯湾和阿曼海)的海洋系统中已经存在哪些海洋和咸淡水入侵性非本地物种,其中哪些具有潜在入侵性,以及哪些物种未来很可能被引入并对生物多样性产生负面影响。总体而言,共识别出136种入侵性非本地物种,其中56种已在该地区存在,另有80种被确定未来可能抵达,包括鱼类、被囊动物、无脊椎动物、植物和原生生物。水生生物入侵性筛选工具包(AS-ISK)被用于识别入侵性非本地物种在该地区具有(或即将具有)入侵性的风险。根据AS-ISK基本风险评估(BRA)阈值,36种现存物种和37种未来可能出现的物种(占所有物种的53.7%)被确定为高风险物种。当考虑气候变化对总体评估的影响时,所有物种中有38.2%的综合风险评分(BRA+CCA)有所增加,这表明在气候变暖条件下风险更高,其中包括风险最高的未来可能出现的入侵性非本地物种——绿蟹(Carcinus maenas),以及现存的大型藻类——绳藻(Hypnea musciformis)。这是该地区首次对入侵性非本地物种进行前瞻性扫描,从而为未来的管理提供了至关重要的基线。本研究的结果是对入侵性非本地物种进行优先排序,以便为该地区有针对性的监测和管理提供决策依据,防止新的生物入侵并控制现有物种,包括其扩散潜力。