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Horizon scan of invasive alien species for the island of Ireland

Authors :
Lucy, Frances E.
Davis, Eithne
Anderson, Roy
Booy, Olaf
Bradley, Ken
Britton, J. Robert
Byrne, Colin
Caffrey, Joseph M.
Coughlan, Neil E.
Crane, Kate
Cuthbert, Ross N.
Dick, Jaimie T.A.
Dickey, James W.E.
Fisher, Jeffrey
Gallagher, Cathal
Harrison, Simon
Jebb, Matthew
Johnson, Mark
Lawton, Colin
Lyons, Dave
Mackie, Tim
Maggs, Christine
Marnell, Ferdia
McLoughlin, Tom
Minchin, Dan
Monaghan, Oonagh
Montgomery, Ian
Moore, Niall
Morrison, Liam
Muir, Rose
Nelson, Brian
Niven, Art
O'Flynn, Colette
Osborne, Bruce
O'Riordan, Ruth M.
Reid, Neil
Roy, Helen
Sheehan, Rory
Stewart, Dorothy
Sullivan, Monica
Tierney, Paula
Treacy, Paula
Tricarico, Elena
Trodd, Wayne
Lucy, Frances E.
Davis, Eithne
Anderson, Roy
Booy, Olaf
Bradley, Ken
Britton, J. Robert
Byrne, Colin
Caffrey, Joseph M.
Coughlan, Neil E.
Crane, Kate
Cuthbert, Ross N.
Dick, Jaimie T.A.
Dickey, James W.E.
Fisher, Jeffrey
Gallagher, Cathal
Harrison, Simon
Jebb, Matthew
Johnson, Mark
Lawton, Colin
Lyons, Dave
Mackie, Tim
Maggs, Christine
Marnell, Ferdia
McLoughlin, Tom
Minchin, Dan
Monaghan, Oonagh
Montgomery, Ian
Moore, Niall
Morrison, Liam
Muir, Rose
Nelson, Brian
Niven, Art
O'Flynn, Colette
Osborne, Bruce
O'Riordan, Ruth M.
Reid, Neil
Roy, Helen
Sheehan, Rory
Stewart, Dorothy
Sullivan, Monica
Tierney, Paula
Treacy, Paula
Tricarico, Elena
Trodd, Wayne
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Ireland, being an island situated on Europe’s western seaboard, has a fewer number of native species than mainland European Union Member States (MS). Increased numbers of vectors and pathways have reduced the island’s biotic isolation, increasing the risk of new introductions and their associated impacts on native biodiversity. It is likely that these risks are greater here than they are in continental Member States, where the native biodiversity is richer. A horizon scanning approach was used to identify the most likely IAS (with the potential to impact biodiversity) to arrive on the island of Ireland within the next ten years. To achieve this, we used a consensus-based approach, whereby expert opinion and discussion groups were utilised to establish and rank a list of 40 species of the most likely terrestrial, freshwater and marine IAS to arrive on the island of Ireland within the decade 2017–2027. The list of 40 included 18 freshwater invaders, 15 terrestrial IAS and seven marine species. Crustacean species (freshwater and marine) were taxonomically dominant (11 out of 40); this reflects their multiple pathways of introduction, their ability to act as ecosystem engineers and their resulting high impacts on biodiversity. Freshwater species dominated the top ten IAS (seven species out of ten), with the signal crayfish (Pacifastacus leniusculus) highlighted as the most likely species to arrive and establish in freshwaters, while roe deer (Capreolus capreolus) (second) and the warm-water barnacle (Hesperibalanus fallax) (fifth), were the most likely terrestrial and marine invaders. This evidence-based list provides important information to the relevant statutory agencies in both jurisdictions in Ireland to prioritise the prevention of the most likely invaders and aid in compliance with legislation, in particular the EU Regulation on Invasive Alien Species (EU 1143/2014). Targeted biosecurity in both jurisdictions is urgently required in order to manage the pathways a

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
text, English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1159197155
Document Type :
Electronic Resource