ScienceDaily (July 11, 2012) — A major new report has found that there
has been a dramatic increase over time in the number of non-native species
arriving in Britain.
In the six decades from 1950 over 600 non-native species have arrived in
Britain. Invasive non-native species are considered to be one of the five major
threats to biodiversity, and have been estimated to cost the UK economy £1.7
billion per annum.
The findings are contained within a new report, "Non-Native Species
in Great Britain: establishment, detection and reporting to inform effective
decision making," which is published July 11.
Although the majority of non-native species are not considered invasive
those that are can cause major ecological or socio-economic impacts, and
generally become permanent burdens if they establish themselves in the natural
environment. Overall about 15% of the species established in Britain are
considered to have a negative impact.
The review arises from the GB Non-Native Species Information Portal
project funded by Defra and coordinated by the NERC Centre for Ecology &
Hydrology (CEH) in collaboration with the British Trust for Ornithology and the
Marine Biological Association. Additional experts nominated by the Biological
Records Centre (within CEH) volunteer schemes and societies, provided further
information on many of the species. Of particular note was the involvement of
the Botanical Society of the British Isles who provided information for all the
plant species (the largest group of established non-native species).
The research team looked at how we can enhance the ability to detect and
report non-native species in Great Britain, creating a new database of nearly
4000 species within the GB Non-Native Species Information Portal (GB-NNSIP).
Nearly 2000 of the species on the database are considered to be established (breeding)
in Britain. Data on all of the species can be accessed through the portal's
website at: www.nonnativespecies.org
An integral part of the GB-NNSIP is a rapid-reporting system whereby
particularly important new arrivals can be immediately notified to the relevant
bodies. One such species, the Asian Hornet, is not yet present in Great Britain
but scientists believe could arrive soon, potentially having a serious impact
on honey bees and other pollinators on which it preys. Anyone that suspects they
have seen this species is encouraged to send in a photograph through the
GB-NNSIP's online recording website 'Recording Invasive Species Counts', which
can also be used to report sightings of 19 other key species including Water
Primrose, American Bullfrog, Carpet Sea-squirt, Tree of heaven, and American
skunk-cabbage.
Dr Helen Roy from the NERC Centre for Ecology & Hydrology led the
research for the report. She announced the publication of the report at the
Organisational Workshop for the Global Invasive Alien Species Information
Partnership (9-10 July 2012), convened by the Convention on Biological
Diversity, at which she was selected as an expert to represent the United
Kingdom. Dr Helen Roy said, "The portal is an excellent example of how
collaboration amongst different organisations is vital in addressing potential
threats to biodiversity. By sharing information the data compiled give us a
comprehensive understanding of non-native species, allowing us to respond
rapidly to the arrival of new species. The portal also provides us with a great
tool to link with wider European and global initiatives to tackle emerging
threats from invasive non-native species."
The review found:
·
There has been an increase over time in the number of non-native species
arriving in Britain and those becoming established. 528 species arrived during
1950-1999 compared to 417 species during 1900-1949 and 250 species during
1850-1899. There have been at least a further 125 new arrivals since 2000.
·
Most of the non-native species that are established within Britain
originate from Europe. However, in recent decades the rate of new arrivals
originating from Europe is slowing and temperate Asia and North America are
both becoming major contributors to the non-native fauna and flora of Great
Britain.
·
There are 1875 established non-native species in Great Britain in total.
The majority are higher plants (1377 species) with Insects as the next most
numerous group (278 species).
·
Most (1684 species) of the documented established non-native species are
found within the terrestrial environment.
Dr Niall Moore from the Non-native Species Secretariat said, "The
Non-native Species Information Portal is a key outcome of Governments'
long-term commitment to tackle the serious problems posed by invasive non-native
species. It provides us with the basic information we need on which to base
objective and sound policy: we need information on trends to see where to put
our effort in future years and we need greater public involvement -- provided
through RISC. We also need to be alert to new species turning up so we can
respond rapidly and hopefully keep them out -- the Asian hornet is a good
example."
Dr Gay Marris from the Food and Environment Research Agency said,
"By alerting the public and professionals to the highly invasive
non-native Asian hornet we can (hopefully) prevent its establishment and
therefore reduce the threat to our honey bees, other beneficial insects and
even to human health."
No comments:
Post a Comment
You only need to enter your comment once! Comments will appear once they have been moderated. This is so as to stop the would-be comedian who has been spamming the comments here with inane and often offensive remarks. You know who you are!