Awareness, detection and management of new and emerging tree pests and pathogens in Europe: stakeholders’ perspectives

IF 3.8 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Neobiota Pub Date : 2023-05-18 DOI:10.3897/neobiota.84.95761
Samantha Green, Katharina Dehnen-Schmutz, Jassy Drakulic, René Eschen, Christophe Orazio, Jacob C. Douma, Karl Lundén, Fernanda Colombari, Hervé Jactel
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Emerging and invasive tree pests and pathogens in Europe are increasing in number and range, having impacts on biodiversity, forest services, ecosystems and human well-being. Stakeholders involved in tree and forest management contribute to the detection and management of new and emerging tree pests and pathogens (PnPs). We surveyed different groups of stakeholders in European countries. The stakeholders were mainly researchers, tree health surveyors and forest managers, as well as forest owners, nurseries, policy-makers, advisors, forestry authorities, NGOs and civil society. We investigated which tools they used to detect and manage PnPs, surveyed their current PnP awareness and knowledge and collated the new and emerging PnP species of concern to them. The 237 respondents were based in 15 European countries, with the majority from the United Kingdom, France and the Czech Republic. There was a strong participation of respondents with a work focus on research and surveying, whereas timber traders and plant importers were less represented. Respondents were surveyed on 18 new, emerging PnPs in Europe and listed an additional 37 pest species and 21 pathogen species as potential future threats. We found that species on EPPO’s list of ‘priority pests’ were better known than those not listed. Stakeholders working in urban environments were more aware of PnPs compared to those working in rural areas. Stakeholders’ awareness of PnPs was not related to the number of new, emerging PnP species present in a country. Stakeholders want access to more detection and management tools, including long-term citizen-science monitoring, maps showing spread and range of new PnPs, pest identification smartphone apps, hand-held detection devices, drone monitoring and eDNA metabarcoding. To help facilitate better forest health across Europe, they called for mixed forest development, reduced nursery stock movement, biosecurity and data sharing amongst organisations. These results indicate that stakeholder knowledge of a few key PnP may be good, but given that the large diversity of threats is so large and future risks unknown, we conclude that multiple and varied methods for generic detection, mitigation and management methods, many in development, are needed in the hands of stakeholders surveying and managing trees and woodlands in Europe.
Awareness,欧洲新出现的树木害虫和病原体的检测和管理:利益相关者的观点
欧洲新出现的和入侵的树木害虫和病原体的数量和范围都在增加,对生物多样性、森林服务、生态系统和人类福祉产生了影响。参与树木和森林管理的利益攸关方有助于发现和管理新出现的树木病虫害和病原体。我们调查了欧洲国家不同的利益相关者群体。利益攸关方主要是研究人员、树木健康调查员和森林管理者,以及森林所有者、苗圃、决策者、顾问、林业主管部门、非政府组织和民间社会。我们调查了他们使用哪些工具来检测和管理PnP,调查了他们目前的PnP意识和知识,并整理了他们关注的新出现的PnP物种。237名受访者来自15个欧洲国家,其中大多数来自英国、法国和捷克共和国。以研究和调查为工作重点的答复者大量参与,而木材贸易商和植物进口商的代表较少。受访者对欧洲18个新兴的PnPs进行了调查,并列出了另外37种害虫和21种病原体作为潜在的未来威胁。我们发现,EPPO“优先害虫”名单上的物种比那些没有被列入名单的物种更为人所知。与在农村地区工作的利益攸关方相比,在城市环境中工作的利益攸关方更了解国家行动计划。利益相关者对PnP的认识与一个国家存在的新出现的PnP物种的数量无关。利益相关者希望获得更多的检测和管理工具,包括长期的公民科学监测、显示新pnp传播和范围的地图、害虫识别智能手机应用程序、手持检测设备、无人机监测和eDNA元条形码。为了帮助促进整个欧洲更好的森林健康,他们呼吁混交林发展、减少苗木流动、生物安全和组织之间的数据共享。这些结果表明,利益相关者对一些关键PnP的了解可能是好的,但鉴于威胁的多样性如此之大,未来的风险未知,我们得出结论,在欧洲调查和管理树木和林地的利益相关者手中,需要多种多样的通用检测、缓解和管理方法,其中许多方法正在开发中。
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来源期刊
Neobiota
Neobiota Agricultural and Biological Sciences-Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
CiteScore
8.10
自引率
7.80%
发文量
0
审稿时长
6 weeks
期刊介绍: NeoBiota is a peer-reviewed, open-access, rapid online journal launched to accelerate research on alien species and biological invasions: aquatic and terrestrial, animals, plants, fungi and micro-organisms. The journal NeoBiota is a continuation of the former NEOBIOTA publication series; for volumes 1-8 see http://www.oekosys.tu-berlin.de/menue/neobiota All articles are published immediately upon editorial approval. All published papers can be freely copied, downloaded, printed and distributed at no charge for the reader. Authors are thus encouraged to post the pdf files of published papers on their homepages or elsewhere to expedite distribution. There is no charge for color.
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