February 4, 2019, Ecological Society
of America
Introduced and invasive species can present big problems,
particularly when those species are charismatic, finds a recently published
paper in the Ecological Society of America's journal Frontiers in Ecology
and the Environment.
People tend to have a more favorable view of species that are
large; do not bite, crawl, or squirm; are not oily or slimy; or are culturally
valued. Some introduced species, like zebra mussels, tend to be reviled by the
public, and people willingly adhere to strict management policies.
However, if an animal has that elusive quality of charisma, people
often don't want it to be controlled, even if it's harming the environment.
Inevitably, these imbalances in public
perception of introduced species influence the way those
organisms are managed.
Take the ring-necked parakeet (Psittacula krameri) for example.
The pet trade has
led to an established population of parakeets in Europe, far outside the
species' native range. Even though parakeets can transmit diseases to native birds,
compete with them for nesting cavities, and are recognized as a crop pest, the
public enjoys seeing them in parks, gardens, and homes. Introduced parakeets
tend to be released in cities, but the parakeets actually exact the most damage
in rural areas. But because people have grown used to them, they are likely to
oppose eradication efforts that take place before the birds become an
established nuisance.
Opposition to the management of charismatic species can be
exacerbated by these "social-ecological mismatches—differences between the
scales of interacting social and ecological systems. In the parakeets' case,
the introduced birds have not been around for more than a few decades, which is
not a long time on an ecological scale. But it is long for humans—many have
grown up knowing the parakeets are part of their neighborhood, and so oppose
efforts to manage them.
A group of researchers from the US Geological Survey (USGS) and
universities in the US and UK explored how public perception and management
actions toward charismatic, introduced species are often at odds with the
ecological characteristics of these populations.
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