Authors
Jean E Fantle-Lepczyk, Phillip J Haubrock, Andrew M Kramer, Ross N Cuthbert, Anna J Turbelin, Robert Crystal-Ornelas, Christophe Diagne, Franck Courchamp
Publication date
2022/2/1
Journal
Science of the Total Environment
Volume
806
Pages
151318
Publisher
Elsevier
Description
The United States has thousands of invasive species, representing a sizable, but unknown burden to the national economy. Given the potential economic repercussions of invasive species, quantifying these costs is of paramount importance both for national economies and invasion management. Here, we used a novel global database of invasion costs (InvaCost) to quantify the overall costs of invasive species in the United States across spatiotemporal, taxonomic, and socioeconomic scales. From 1960 to 2020, reported invasion costs totaled $4.52 trillion (USD 2017). Considering only observed, highly reliable costs, this total cost reached $1.22 trillion with an average annual cost of $19.94 billion/year. These costs increased from $2.00 billion annually between 1960 and 1969 to $21.08 billion annually between 2010 and 2020. Most costs (73%) were related to resource damages and losses ($896.22 billion), as …
Total citations
20212022202320243226733
Scholar articles
JE Fantle-Lepczyk, PJ Haubrock, AM Kramer… - Science of the Total Environment, 2022