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El. knyga: Bioinvasions and Globalization: Ecology, Economics, Management, and Policy

Edited by (ecoSERVICES Group, Arizona State University, USA), Edited by (Department of Biology, University of York, UK), Edited by (Department of Biological Sciences, Stanford University, USA)
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Dec-2009
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191574313
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Dec-2009
  • Leidėjas: Oxford University Press
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780191574313

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Bioinvasions and Globalization synthesises our current knowledge of the ecology and economics of biological invasions, providing an in-depth evaluation of the science and its implications for managing the causes and consequences of one of the most pressing environmental issues facing humanity today.

Emergent zoonotic diseases such as HIV and SARS have already imposed major costs in terms of human health, whilst plant and animal pathogens have had similar effects on agriculture, forestry, fisheries. The introduction of pests, predators and competitors into many ecosystems has disrupted the benefits they provide to people, in many cases leading to the extirpation or even extinction of native species. This timely book analyzes the main drivers of bioinvasions - the growth of world trade, global transport and travel, habitat conversion and land use intensification, and climate change - and their consequences for ecosystem functioning. It shows how bioinvasions impose disproportionately high costs on countries where a large proportion of people depend heavily on the exploitation of natural resources. It considers the options for improving assessment and management of invasive species risks, and especially for achieving the international cooperation needed to address bioinvasions as a negative externality of international trade.

Recenzijos

Bioinvasions and Globalization provide the foundation and fodder to help drive new innovative strategies to manage invasive species in a globalized world. * Trends in Ecology and Evolution *

Acronyms xv
List of Editors and Contributors
xvii
The Problem of Biological Invasions
1(18)
Charles Perrings
Harold Mooney
Mark Williamson
Introduction
1(2)
The ecological dimension
3(4)
The economic problem
7(2)
Policy and management options
9(3)
Recognizing the global dimension of the problem
12(7)
PART I THE DRIVERS OF BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
Climate Change and Species' Distributions: An Alien Future?
19(11)
Chris D. Thomas
Ralf Ohlemuller
Introduction
19(1)
Natives and aliens
19(1)
Future distributions will be very different
20(1)
What are ``invasive species''?
21(1)
Climatic invasibility
22(1)
The invasion-climate change interaction
23(3)
Love thine enemies---but not all of them!
26(4)
Climate and Invasive Species: The Limits to Climate Information
30(12)
Mark New
Carol McSweeney
Introduction
30(1)
Climate observations
31(2)
Climate models
33(2)
Emissions and other forcing of climate
35(1)
Approaches to the use of uncertain climate information
35(2)
Scenarios
36(1)
Probabilistic projections
36(1)
A middle ground?
36(1)
Discussion
37(5)
Globalization and Invasive Alien Species: Trade, Pests, and Pathogens
42(14)
Charles Perrings
Eli Fenichel
Ann Kinzig
Identifying the problem
42(2)
Species dispersal and inspection and interception effort
44(2)
Data and methods
46(3)
Empirical results
49(3)
Discussion
52(4)
Variation in the Rate and Pattern of Spread in Introduced Species and its Implications
56(10)
Mark Williamson
Introduction
56(1)
Variation in spread rates within species
56(3)
Variation in pattern and rate of spread between species
59(2)
Time to complete spreading
61(2)
Implications and conclusions
63(3)
Habitats and Land Use as Determinants of Plant Invasions in the Temperate Zone of Europe
66(17)
Petr Pysek
Milan Chytry
Vojtech Jarosik
Introduction
66(1)
Overview of studies on the level of invasion in habitats
66(3)
Representation of alien species in habitats
67(1)
Which habitats are most invaded?
67(1)
Importance of scale
68(1)
Native-alien relationship
68(1)
Theoretical background of community invasibility
69(1)
Separating the level of invasion from invasibility
70(5)
Comparison of the levels of habitat invasions with their invasibility
70(4)
Relative importance of factors determining the level of invasion
74(1)
Habitat vs. propagule limitation and methodological pitfalls
75(1)
Habitat-based mapping of plant invasions in Europe and prediction of future trends: the next step?
75(1)
Conclusions
76(7)
PART II ECONOMICS
If Invasive Species are ``Pollutants'', Should Polluters Pay?
83(17)
R. David Simpson
Introduction
83(2)
Assumptions and literature
85(3)
Some revealing figures
88(2)
A simple model of invasive species with nonconvex damages
90(3)
Elaborations and extensions
93(2)
Implications for policy
95(2)
When is aggressive policy appropriate?
95(1)
Are there any easy diagnostics?
95(1)
How can abuse be prevented?
96(1)
Conclusion
97(3)
A Model of Prevention, Detection, and Control for Invasive Species
100(10)
Stephen Polasky
Introduction
100(2)
The model
102(2)
Analysis
104(3)
General solution
105(1)
Numerical example
105(2)
Discussion
107(3)
Second Best Policies in Invasive Species Management: When are they ``Good Enough''?
110(17)
David Finnoff
Alexei Potapov
Mark A. Lewis
Introduction
110(1)
Invasion dynamics
111(1)
Decision models
112(12)
Second best rule
113(4)
First best rule
117(2)
Comparison of the two rules
119(5)
Discussion
124(1)
Conclusions
124(3)
Optimal Random Exploration for Trade-related Nonindigenous Species Risk
127(18)
Michael Springborn
Christopher Costello
Peyton Ferrier
Introduction
127(2)
A Bayesian learning model of trade-related NIS risk
129(1)
The inspection allocation decision problem
130(2)
Allocation method and results
132(10)
The tractable inspection allocation decision problem
132(3)
A fully dynamic model and non-constant exploration policy
135(7)
Discussion
142(3)
The Role of Space in Invasive Species Management
145(16)
Julia Touza
Martin Drechsler
Karin Johst
Katharina Dehnen-Schmutz
Introduction
145(1)
Spatial aspects of the economics of biological invasions
146(4)
Spatially implicit models
146(2)
Spatially differentiated models
148(1)
Spatially explicit models
149(1)
Spatially explicit and differentiated models
149(1)
Modeling invasions in spatially heterogeneous systems
150(4)
The management problem
150(1)
The model
151(1)
Analysis and results
152(2)
Discussion and conclusions
154(7)
PART III MANAGEMENT AND POLICY
The Impact of Invasive Alien Species on Ecosystem Services and Human Well-being
161(22)
Liba Pejchar
Harold Mooney
Introduction
161(1)
Invasive alien species and global change
161(1)
Quantifying impacts of invasive alien species
161(1)
Defining ecosystem services
162(1)
Mechanisms
162(1)
Ecosystem services
163(10)
Provisioning
163(3)
Regulating Services
166(5)
Cultural Services
171(2)
Case studies
173(1)
Research and policy recommendations
173(10)
Current and Future Consequences of Invasion by Alien Species: A Case Study from South Africa
183(19)
B.W. van Wilgen
D.M. Richardson
Introduction
183(1)
Invasive species in South Africa
184(4)
Plants
184(1)
Mammals
184(2)
Birds
186(1)
Reptiles and amphibians
186(1)
Terrestrial invertebrates
186(1)
Freshwater biota
187(1)
Marine organisms
187(1)
Pathways of invasion
187(1)
Current impacts of invasive species in South Africa
188(5)
Impacts on water resources
188(1)
Impacts on grazing resources
189(1)
Impacts on biodiversity in terrestrial ecosystems
189(1)
Impacts on fire regimes and erosion
190(1)
Impacts on human health and safety
190(1)
Impacts on freshwater aquatic ecosystems
190(1)
Economic assessments of impact
191(2)
Future impacts
193(4)
Estimates of magnitude of future impacts
193(1)
Motivating for control on the basis of expected benefits
193(4)
Conclusions
197(5)
Invasive Plants in Tropical Human-Dominated Landscapes: Need for an Inclusive Management Strategy
202(18)
R. Uma Shaanker
Gladwin Joseph
N.A. Aravind
Ramesh Kannan
K.N. Ganeshaiah
Introduction
202(2)
Dynamics of invasive species and management scenarios
204(4)
How does management scale witht the dynamics of invasive species?
204(3)
When control of invasive species fails: three examples
207(1)
The specific case of Lantana in India
208(6)
Invasion, spread, and ecosystem impacts
208(4)
When you cannot break it, at least bend it!
212(2)
The management of uncontrollable invasive species: from exclusion to inclusion
214(6)
Prevention: Designing and Implementing National Policy and Management Programs to Reduce the Risks from Invasive Species
220(15)
Reuben P. Keller
David M. Lodge
Introduction
220(2)
Economic and ecological context for invasive species prevention
220(2)
Prevention
222(7)
Risk assessment for prevention of introductions via commerce in live organisms
223(5)
Risk assessment for prevention of transportation-related introductions
228(1)
Preventing invasive species: opportunities for improved risk assessments
229(3)
Quantitative vs. qualitative approaches
229(1)
What is an appropriate risk threshold?
230(1)
Pre-border vs. border prevention
230(1)
Resource availability
231(1)
Gaps and overlaps among government agencies
231(1)
Species spread across borders
232(1)
Conclusions
232(3)
Globalization and Bioinvasions: The International Policy Problem
235(16)
Charles Perrings
Stas Burgiel
Mark Lonsdale
Harold Mooney
Mark Williamson
Dimensions of the policy problem
235(2)
The institutional environment
237(2)
Provide the public good at the right geographical scale
239(2)
Precautionary action should be targeted, and support learning
241(2)
Many invasive species problems may be most effectively managed at the regional scale
243(2)
Pay special attention tot the impacts of invasive species on the poor
245(2)
Conclusions
247(4)
Appendix 1: Agreement on the Application of Sanitary and Phytosanitary Measures (1995), Articles 1-11
251(5)
General provisions
251(1)
Basic rights and obligations
251(1)
Harmonization
251(1)
Equivalence
252(1)
Assessment of risk and determination of the appropriate level of sanitary or phytosanitary protection
252(1)
Adaptation to regional conditions, including pest- or disease-free areas and areas of-low pest of disease prevalence
253(1)
Transparency
254(1)
Control, inspection and approval procedures
254(1)
Technical assistance
254(1)
Special and differential treatment
254(1)
Consultations and dispute settlement
254(2)
Appendix 2: International Health Regulations (2005) Articles 2, 5-13
256(5)
Purpose and scope
256(1)
Surveillance
256(1)
Notification
256(1)
Information-sharing during unexpected or unusual public health events
257(1)
Consultation
257(1)
Other reports
257(1)
Verification
257(1)
Provision of information by WHO
258(1)
Determination of a public health emergency of international concern
258(1)
Public health response
259(2)
Index 261
Charles Perrings is Professor of Environmental Economics at Arizona State University, where he directs the ecoSERVICES Group within the College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. He co-chairs (with Shahid Naeem) the ecoSERVICES core project of DIVERSITAS, the international program of biodiversity science. He is the author of numerous books and scientific papers on the economics of biodiversity change.



Harold Mooney is Professor of Biology at Stanford University. His main research area is in global change biology. He has published widely on invasive species and was the founding chair of the Global Invasive Species Programme. He currently chairs the scientific committee for DIVERSITAS, the international program for research in biological diversity.



Mark Williamson is Professor of Biology (Emeritus) at the University of York. He is a population biologist who founded the department of biology at York in 1963 and who has been involved with biological invasion research since the first SCOPE programme (1982-89).