Prioritizing the Risk and Management of Introduced Species in a Landscape with High Indigenous Biodiversity

Jonathan Q. Richmond, J. Kingston, B. Ewing, Wendy M. Bear, S. Hathaway, Cedric Lee, C. Swift, K. Preston, Allison J. Schultz, B. Kus, Kerwin Russel, P. Unitt, Bradford D. Hollingsworth, R. E. Espinoza, Michael Wall, S. Tremor, Kai T. Palenscar, R. Fisher
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Abstract

Abstract. Risk analysis protocols for prioritizing the management of non-native species are numerous, yet few incorporate risk and management in the same analysis or accommodate a broad diversity of taxa outside of a specific geographic area. We adapted a protocol that accounts for these factors to address non-native animal species in the Southern California/Northern Baja California Coast Ecoregion near the international border in San Diego County, an area with high indigenous biodiversity and high numbers of species of conservation concern. This stepwise, semi-quantitative protocol is applicable to any animal group in any predefined geographic area, relies on consensus-building among taxonomic experts, and has been vetted through previous use and in peer-reviewed literature. Our results show that the final prioritization was driven mainly by management feasibility, with top-ranked species having multitrophic effects that favor other non-native invaders over native residents. Conditions within the assessment area required some modification to the protocol as it was originally designed, namely a shift in emphasis from eradication to control, given that eradication is implausible for most non-native species in the assessment area. We call attention to taxon-specific issues that surfaced during the analysis, identify areas for improvement in this first-ever risk assessment for invasive animal species in the Natural Communities Conservation Plan/Habitat Conservation Plan (NCCP/HCP) reserve system of San Diego County, and provide suggestions for further refinement of the protocol. This study builds on the effort to standardize risk analysis for invasive species globally, given that many of the same invaders present threats to indigenous biodiversity worldwide.
本土生物多样性高的景观中引入物种风险的优先排序与管理
摘要用于优先管理非本地物种的风险分析方案有很多,但很少有将风险和管理纳入同一分析或适应特定地理区域以外的广泛多样性的分类群。我们修改了一份考虑这些因素的协议,以解决圣地亚哥县国际边界附近南加州/北下加利福尼亚州海岸生态区的非本地动物物种,该地区具有高度的本地生物多样性和大量的保护物种。这种循序渐进的半定量方案适用于任何预先确定的地理区域内的任何动物群体,依赖于分类学专家之间建立的共识,并通过以前的使用和同行评议的文献进行了审查。结果表明,最终的优先排序主要由管理可行性驱动,排名靠前的物种具有多营养效应,有利于其他非本地入侵者而不是本地居民。评估区域内的情况要求对最初设计的议定书进行一些修改,即将重点从根除转向控制,因为在评估区域内对大多数非本地物种进行根除是不可能的。本文对圣迭戈县自然群落保护计划/生境保护计划(NCCP/HCP)保护区系统中首次进行的入侵动物风险评估提出了改进建议,并对进一步完善方案提出了建议。鉴于许多入侵物种对全球本土生物多样性构成威胁,本研究建立在对全球入侵物种风险分析标准化的努力基础上。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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