Strangers in a strange land; freshwater fish introductions, impacts, management and socio-ecological feedbacks in a small island nation – the case of Aotearoa New Zealand

IF 3.8 2区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION
Calum MacNeil, Robin Holmes, E. Challies, Kiely McFarlane, Jason Arnold
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Invasive non-native species (INNS) are key drivers of global biodiversity loss. This is particularly evident in freshwater ecosystems, where the rates of both vertebrate biodiversity loss and biological invasion exceed those of marine and terrestrial systems. Aotearoa New Zealand (henceforth Aotearoa) like many other island nations, has a troubled history with NNS. However, it is also unique, as the main islands were the last major landmasses on Earth to remain uninhabited by humans. The endemic fauna had evolved in isolation from any anthropogenic influence or introduced NNS, until the mid-thirteenth century with the arrival of Māori, the first people to inhabit Aotearoa. Centuries later, following European colonisation, many non-native freshwater fish were deliberately introduced by acclimatisation societies. Currently, most of the native freshwater fish species of Aotearoa are at risk of extinction, despite almost 90% of these being found nowhere else on earth. Many of these species are highly valued by the indigenous people of Aotearoa, who have repeatedly highlighted biases towards NNS in freshwater fish management. With the rate of biological invasions increasing, it is timely to address interconnected issues concerning the history, impacts, management and current / future policy directions, including those involving biosecurity, for non-native freshwater fish in Aotearoa. We do this by applying a social-ecological systems (SES) lens, with a focus on causal-loop relationships and feedbacks to improve understanding of the dynamics of drivers, mechanisms and impacts of such invasions. We highlight the tensions that have resulted from managing some NNS as ‘pests’ threatening native biodiversity, while simultaneously promoting a tourism and recreational fishery resource for specific NNS. This has generated extremely polarized views on the ‘status’ of non-native freshwater fish species and given rise to contradictory and divergent goals for their management. We show how a disjointed and often incoherent policy landscape has contributed to legal ‘anomalies’ for NNS, including policy misalignments and gaps, hampering effective use of resources, while also entrenching contradictory management programmes for different stakeholders. Our study shows how these interconnected issues have been manifested in social-ecological feedback loops on core aspects of NNS policy and management, past and present. Consequently, there is a need for increased comprehension of the diverse array of potential impacts of NNS for different environments, stakeholders and Māori while developing coherent and practical management methods to reduce such impacts and improve social-ecological resilience. We conclude that adopting a SES approach will aid this endeavour.
陌生土地上的陌生人;小岛屿国家淡水鱼类的引进、影响、管理和社会生态反馈--新西兰奥特亚罗瓦的案例
非本地物种入侵(INNS)是造成全球生物多样性丧失的主要原因。这一点在淡水生态系统中尤为明显,那里的脊椎动物生物多样性丧失率和生物入侵率都超过了海洋和陆地系统。新西兰奥特亚罗瓦(以下简称奥特亚罗瓦)与许多其他岛国一样,在 NNS 方面有着不愉快的历史。不过,新西兰也有其独特之处,因为主要岛屿是地球上最后一块没有人类居住的主要陆地。直到 13 世纪中叶毛利人(第一批居住在奥特亚罗亚的居民)的到来,当地特有的动物群一直在与世隔绝的状态下进化,没有受到任何人类活动的影响,也没有引进任何 NNS。几个世纪后,随着欧洲殖民者的到来,许多非本地淡水鱼被适应性社会有意引进。目前,奥特亚罗瓦的大多数本地淡水鱼类都面临着灭绝的危险,尽管其中近 90% 的鱼类在地球上其他地方都找不到。其中许多物种受到奥特亚罗瓦土著居民的高度重视,他们曾多次强调淡水鱼管理中对非本地物种的偏见。随着生物入侵速度的加快,现在是时候解决有关奥特亚罗亚非本地淡水鱼类的历史、影响、管理和当前/未来政策方向(包括涉及生物安全的政策方向)等相互关联的问题了。为此,我们采用了社会生态系统(SES)视角,重点关注因果循环关系和反馈,以加深对此类入侵的驱动因素、机制和影响的动态理解。我们强调了将一些 NNS 作为威胁本地生物多样性的 "害虫 "来管理,同时又促进特定 NNS 的旅游和休闲渔业资源所造成的紧张关系。这就造成了对非本地淡水鱼类 "地位 "的极端两极分化的看法,并导致了对其管理目标的矛盾和分歧。我们展示了相互脱节且往往不连贯的政策环境是如何导致 NNS 的法律 "异常 "的,包括政策错位和空白,阻碍了资源的有效利用,同时也巩固了不同利益相关者相互矛盾的管理方案。我们的研究表明,这些相互关联的问题是如何在过去和现在的 NNS 政策和管理核心方面的社会生态反馈循环中体现出来的。因此,有必要进一步了解 NNS 对不同环境、利益相关者和毛利人可能产生的各种影响,同时制定协调一致、切实可行的管理方法,以减少此类影响并提高社会生态复原力。我们的结论是,采用 SES 方法将有助于这项工作。
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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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