Journal article
Authors list: Thiele, J; Kollmann, J; Markussen, B; Otte, A
Publication year: 2010
Pages: 2025-2035
Journal: Biological Invasions
Volume number: 12
Issue number: 7
ISSN: 1387-3547
eISSN: 1573-1464
DOI Link: https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-009-9605-2
Publisher: Springer
The theoretical underpinnings of the assessment of invasive alien species impacts need to be improved. At present most approaches are unreliable to quantify impact at regional scales and do not allow for comparison of different invasive species. There are four basic problems that need to be addressed: (1) Some impacted ecosystem traits are spatially not additive; (2) invader effects may increase non-linearly with abundance or there may be effect thresholds impairing estimates of linear impact models; (3) the abundance and impact of alien species will often co-vary with environmental variation; and (4) the total invaded range is an inappropriate measure for quantifying regional impact because the habitat area available for invasion can vary markedly among invasive species. Mathematical models and empirical data using an invasive alien plant species (Heracleum mantegazzianum) indicate that ignoring these issues leads to impact estimates almost an order of magnitude from the real values. Thus, we propose a habitat-sensitive formula for regional impact assessment that is unaffected by non-linearity. Furthermore, we make some statistical suggestions on how to assess invader effects properly and we discuss the quantification of the invaded range. These improvements are crucial for impact assessment with the overall aim of prioritizing management of invasive species.
Abstract:
Citation Styles
Harvard Citation style: Thiele, J., Kollmann, J., Markussen, B. and Otte, A. (2010) Impact assessment revisited: improving the theoretical basis for management of invasive alien species, Biological Invasions, 12(7), pp. 2025-2035. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-009-9605-2
APA Citation style: Thiele, J., Kollmann, J., Markussen, B., & Otte, A. (2010). Impact assessment revisited: improving the theoretical basis for management of invasive alien species. Biological Invasions. 12(7), 2025-2035. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-009-9605-2