No saturation in the accumulation of alien species worldwide

Seebens, H; Blackburn, TM; Dyer, EE; Genovesi, P; Hulme, PE; Jeschke, JM; Pagad, S; Pyšek, P; Winter, M; Arianoutsou, M; Bacher, S; Blasius, B; Brundu, G; Capinha, C; Celesti-Grapow, L; Dawson, W; Dullinger, S; Fuentes, N; Jäger, H; ... Essl, F

HERO ID

10288354

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year

2017

Language

English

PMID

28198420

HERO ID 10288354
In Press No
Year 2017
Title No saturation in the accumulation of alien species worldwide
Authors Seebens, H; Blackburn, TM; Dyer, EE; Genovesi, P; Hulme, PE; Jeschke, JM; Pagad, S; Pyšek, P; Winter, M; Arianoutsou, M; Bacher, S; Blasius, B; Brundu, G; Capinha, C; Celesti-Grapow, L; Dawson, W; Dullinger, S; Fuentes, N; Jäger, H; ... Essl, F
Journal Nature Communications
Volume 8
Issue 1
Page Numbers 14435
Abstract Although research on human-mediated exchanges of species has substantially intensified during the last centuries, we know surprisingly little about temporal dynamics of alien species accumulations across regions and taxa. Using a novel database of 45,813 first records of 16,926 established alien species, we show that the annual rate of first records worldwide has increased during the last 200 years, with 37% of all first records reported most recently (1970-2014). Inter-continental and inter-taxonomic variation can be largely attributed to the diaspora of European settlers in the nineteenth century and to the acceleration in trade in the twentieth century. For all taxonomic groups, the increase in numbers of alien species does not show any sign of saturation and most taxa even show increases in the rate of first records over time. This highlights that past efforts to mitigate invasions have not been effective enough to keep up with increasing globalization.
Doi 10.1038/ncomms14435
Pmid 28198420
Wosid WOS:000394221600001
Is Certified Translation No
Dupe Override No
Is Public Yes
Language Text English