4.4 Article

A proposed unified framework to describe the management of biological invasions

Journal

BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
Volume 22, Issue 9, Pages 2633-2645

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-020-02298-2

Keywords

Terminology; Management; Prevention; Containment; Eradication; Removal; Keeping

Funding

  1. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) [JE 288/8-1]
  2. DFG [JE 288/9-1, JE 288/9-2]
  3. G.E. Hutchinson Chair
  4. project Capacity Building Neobiota (Austrian Federal Ministry for Sustainability and Tourism)
  5. long-term research development project [RVO 67985939, 17-19025S]
  6. EXPRO grant (Czech Science Foundation) [19-28807X]
  7. J. E. Purkyne Fellowship of the Czech Academy of Sciences

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Managing the impacts of invasive alien species (IAS) is a great societal challenge. A wide variety of terms have been used to describe the management of invasive alien species and the sequence in which they might be applied. This variety and lack of consistency creates uncertainty in the presentation and description of management in policy, science and practice. Here we expand on the existing description of the invasion process to develop an IAS management framework. We define the different forms of active management using a novel approach based on changes in species status, avoiding the need for stand-alone descriptions of management types, and provide a complete set of potential management activities. We propose a standardised set of management terminology as an emergent feature of this framework. We identified eight key forms of management: (1) pathway management, (2) interception, (3) limits to keeping, (4) secure keeping, (5) eradication, (6) complete reproductive removal, (7) containment and (8) suppression. We recognise four associated terms: prevention; captive management; rapid eradication; and long-term management, and note the use of impact mitigation and restoration as associated forms of management. We discuss the wider use of this framework and the supporting activities required to ensure management is well-targeted, cost-effective and makes best use of limited resources.

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