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A critical review of the precautionary approach of the IUCN impact classification for non-native taxa

期刊

CONSERVATION BIOLOGY
卷 37, 期 2, 页码 -

出版社

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/cobi.14037

关键词

EICAT; invasive species; non-native species; Red Lists; threatened species

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The International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) proposed the use of the Environmental Impact Classification for Alien Taxa to standardize the classification of introduced species (IS) based on their environmental impact. However, the application of the precautionary principle (PP) in the early steps of the risk analysis process is unnecessary, as it should be reserved for emergency situations that require urgent decisions. Furthermore, the IUCN did not provide sufficient scientific evidence to justify the use of PP, as the rules seem to be primarily rooted in ethical values rather than scientific reasoning.
The International Union for the Conservation of Nature (IUCN) proposes the use of the Environmental Impact Classification for Alien Taxa to standardize the classification of introduced species (IS) based on their environmental impact. The IUCN invoked the precautionary principle (PP) via 2 rules: the impact assigned to a taxon must be the maximum recorded impact across different impact assessments, and when the main driver of environmental damage is unclear, it must be assumed to be caused by the IS. The validity of PP is conditioned on the degree of emergency that warrants urgent decisions and on the scientific evidence demonstrating the advantages of applying a preventive measure. The application of an impact classification system does not arise in the context of an emergency that requires management; it occurs before the decision-making phase. Thus, PP should not be used in early steps of the risk analysis process. The IUCN also did not provide enough scientific basis to justify the use of PP. Instead, the PP rules appear to be rooted primarily in the ethical value system underlying conservation science. Conservationists assign intrinsic value to native species by virtue of their roles and relationships within ecological and evolutionary systems and processes; thus, individuals introduced in new environments not only cease to have value because they are no longer part of that natural diversity and lack those links with the rest of the ecosystem, but they become a threat to what conservationists value most. The consequence of this belief is that all introduced taxa will have an impact at some level, suggesting that values justify the PP rules.

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