1. Unintended consequences of valuing the contributions of non-native species: misguided conservation initiatives in a megadiverse region.
- Author
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Pelicice, Fernando Mayer, Agostinho, Angelo Antonio, Alves, Carlos Bernardo Mascarenhas, Arcifa, Marlene Sofia, Azevedo-Santos, Valter M., Brito, Marcelo Fulgêncio Guedes, de Brito, Pâmella Silva, de Castro Campanha, Paula Maria Gênova, Carvalho, Fernando Rogério, da Costa, Gabriel Costa, Cozzuol, Mario Alberto, Cunico, Almir Manoel, Dagosta, Fernando Cesar Paiva, Dias, Rosa Maria, Fernandes, Rodrigo, Franco, Ana Clara Sampaio, Garcia, Diego Azevedo Zoccal, Giarrizzo, Tommaso, Gubiani, Éder André, and Guimarães, Erick Cristofore
- Subjects
WILDLIFE conservation ,INTRODUCED species ,ANTHROPOCENE Epoch ,SOCIAL conflict ,ENVIRONMENTAL degradation ,BIOLOGICAL invasions - Abstract
The introduction of non-native species (NNS) and the resulting biological invasions are conspicuous features of the Anthropocene Epoch. Parallel to these phenomena, some initiatives (political, social and scientific) have sought to value and protect invasive populations, recognizing some benefits that NNS may deliver to people and nature. Given this growing trend of valuing NNS, we considered opportune to address this issue in the context of megadiverse tropical countries. We investigated an emerging trend that has advocated the protection of highly invasive fishes by legal instruments, i.e., the protection of invasive peacock basses (genus Cichla) in Brazil. We recorded 16 bills or laws proposed between 2017 and 2022 that determine fishing restrictions to protect invasive Cichla spp. from overfishing and other impacts, in order to favor population recruitment, growth, colonization and spread. Specifically, they establish restrictions on fishing, capture, transport, trade, and processing, including quotas, compulsory catch and release, length limits, use of gears, and temporal interdictions. They also determine the naturalization of peacock basses in some main basins of South America, which include different watersheds and ecoregions, with risk of intercountry invasions. This particular case is instructive to unveil the risks of positions that emphasize positive contributions of NNS to society and nature, as these misguided conservation actions favor invasive organisms with high potential to cause environmental degradation, biodiversity losses, and social conflicts. These positions find fertile ground in some contexts, especially in tropical developing countries, where economic constraints, poor access to information, opportunism, and bad political behavior have been the norm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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