Authors
Ross N Cuthbert, Zarah Pattison, Nigel G Taylor, Laura Verbrugge, Christophe Diagne, Danish A Ahmed, Boris Leroy, Elena Angulo, Elizabeta Briski, César Capinha, Jane A Catford, Tatenda Dalu, Franz Essl, Rodolphe E Gozlan, Phillip J Haubrock, Melina Kourantidou, Andrew M Kramer, David Renault, Ryan J Wasserman, Franck Courchamp
Publication date
2021/6/25
Journal
Science of the total environment
Volume
775
Pages
145238
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
Much research effort has been invested in understanding ecological impacts of invasive alien species (IAS) across ecosystems and taxonomic groups, but empirical studies about economic effects lack synthesis. Using a comprehensive global database, we determine patterns and trends in economic costs of aquatic IAS by examining: (i) the distribution of these costs across taxa, geographic regions and cost types; (ii) the temporal dynamics of global costs; and (iii) knowledge gaps, especially compared to terrestrial IAS. Based on the costs recorded from the existing literature, the global cost of aquatic IAS conservatively summed to US$345 billion, with the majority attributed to invertebrates (62%), followed by vertebrates (28%), then plants (6%). The largest costs were reported in North America (48%) and Asia (13%), and were principally a result of resource damages (74%); only 6% of recorded costs were from …
Total citations
202120222023202444778068
Scholar articles
RN Cuthbert, Z Pattison, NG Taylor, L Verbrugge… - Science of the total environment, 2021