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The Laurentian Great Lakes as a beachhead and a gathering place for biological invasions

机译:劳伦山脉五大湖是滩涂和生物入侵的聚集地

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Invasive species alter ecosystems and harm economies. Improved understanding of past invasions can inform and improve current and future management efforts. We investigated the global and North American distribution of nonindigenous species (NIS) prior to their establishment in the Laurentian Great Lakes (GL). For the subset of NIS first recorded in North America in the GL, we also investigated the likelihood of these species to spread beyond the basin. With respect to biological invasions, we assessed if the GL basin is a beachhead (i.e., most NIS in the basin originating from outside North America) or a gathering place (i.e., most NIS arriving in GL already in North America). We found that the GL are both a beachhead and a gathering place, depending on the vector of introduction to the basin. Ballast water release introduces most beachhead NIS (43 of 65, 66%), whereas canals, authorized release, and unauthorized release primarly introduce gathering place NIS (67 of 101, 66%). Overall, gathering place NIS currently outnumber beachhead NIS in the GL (101 vs. 65). Regarding spread of beachhead NIS beyond the GL, we found that time elapsed since discovery in the GL predicts secondary spread with 87% accuracy. Our classification model suggests that beachhead NIS established populations outside the GL basin within 77 years of discovery there, suggesting that numerous NIS may be poised to spread beyond the GL basin in the near future. Given the established policy goal of both Canada and the United States to reduce harm from invasions, several recommendations arise from our analysis: (1) maintain, strengthen, and monitor the efficacy of ballast water regulations to prevent the introduction of additional beachhead NIS, (2) conduct risk assessments of NIS that are already in North America but not yet in the GL to prioritize management actions, and (3) seek regional coordination of regulations of vectors of gathering place NIS to shore up weak policy links.
机译:入侵物种改变生态系统并损害经济。对过去入侵的进一步了解可以为当前和将来的管理工作提供信息并改善其工作。在劳伦大湖(GL)建立之前,我们调查了非本地物种(NIS)的全球和北美分布。对于GL在北美首次记录的NIS子集,我们还研究了这些物种扩散到盆地以外的可能性。关于生物入侵,我们评估了GL盆地是滩头堡(即盆地中大多数NIS来自北美以外)还是聚集地(即大多数NIS到达北美的GL已经在北美)。我们发现GL既是滩头堡又是聚集地,这取决于流域引入的媒介。压载水的释放引入了大多数滩头NIS(占65的43,占66%),而运河,经授权的排放和未经许可的排放则主要引入了集水场所NIS(占101的67,占66%)。总体而言,在GL中,聚集地NIS当前的数量超过了滩头NIS(101 vs. 65)。关于滩头NIS在GL以外的扩散,我们发现自GL中的发现预测二次扩散的准确度为87%以来已经过了一段时间。我们的分类模型表明,滩头NIS在发现后GL盆地内便在GL盆地外建立了种群,这表明在不久的将来可能会有许多NIS扩散到GL盆地以外。鉴于加拿大和美国既定的减少入侵造成的政策目标,我们的分析提出了以下建议:(1)维持,加强和监视压载水法规的有效性,以防止引入更多的滩头NIS,( 2)对已经在北美但尚未在GL中进行的NIS进行风险评估,以对管理措施进行优先排序;以及(3)寻求对NIS聚集地的法规进行区域协调,以加强薄弱的政策联系。

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