Journal
BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
Volume 12, Issue 8, Pages 2573-2583Publisher
SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-009-9666-2
Keywords
Invasive alien marine species; Marine environmental management; Oil rigs; Risk assessment
Categories
Funding
- Ovenstones Agencies
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A virtually intact subtropical reef community (14 phyla, 40 families and 62 non-native taxa) was associated with a rig under tow from Brazil that became stranded on the remote island of Tristan da Cunha. This exposes rigs as a significant vector spreading alien marine organisms, and includes the first records of free-swimming marine finfish populations becoming established after unintentional movement. With relatively trivial effort, a pre-tow clean would have obviated the need to salvage and dispose of the rig (undertaken largely to address concerns about invasive species), at a cost of similar to US$20 million. Our findings show that towing biofouled structures across biogeographic boundaries present unexcelled opportunities for invasion to a wide diversity of marine species. Better control and management of this vector is required urgently. Simultaneous, unintentional introductions of viable populations of multiple marine organisms are rare events, and we develop a basic framework for rapid assessment of invasion risks.
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