Animal introductions to southern systems: lessons for ecology and for policy

Numerous animal species have been introduced to areas from which they were previously absent, and many of these have become invasive, with substantial impacts. However, in other cases, impacts are assumed from theory. Empirical demonstrations are uncommon, making evidence-based conservation policy d...

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Main Authors: Chown, S.L., Spear, D., Lee, J.E., Shaw, J.D.
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Zoological Society of Southern Africa 2010
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/119924
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spelling ftunstellenbosch:oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/119924 2023-05-15T14:05:07+02:00 Animal introductions to southern systems: lessons for ecology and for policy Chown, S.L. Spear, D. Lee, J.E. Shaw, J.D. 2010-11-03T12:52:01Z 350011 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/119924 en eng Zoological Society of Southern Africa Chown, S.L., Spear, D., Lee, J.E. and Shaw, J.D. (2009). Animal introductions to southern systems: lessons for ecology and for policy. African Zoology, 44(2), 248-262 http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/119924 barriers biological invasions legislation mammals propagule pressure Marion Island South Africa JournalArticles 2010 ftunstellenbosch 2021-08-31T00:08:56Z Numerous animal species have been introduced to areas from which they were previously absent, and many of these have become invasive, with substantial impacts. However, in other cases, impacts are assumed from theory. Empirical demonstrations are uncommon, making evidence-based conservation policy difficult to achieve. Here we review the broader ecological and conservation lessons from recent work on non-indigenous species in two southern systems, the policy implications thereof, and the subsequent changes to policy as a result of this work. First, we discuss invasions in the Antarctic region. Strong relationships exist between numbers of animal invasions and numbers of human visitors to Southern Ocean Islands, abiotic factors are often limiting for introduced species, homogenization across islands differs among taxonomic groups, and control actions can rapidly result in unintended consequences. This knowledge has influenced national policy and decisions within the Antarctic Treaty System. Second, we discuss ungulate introductions and translocations, both in South Africa and elsewhere. We show that substantial homogenization has resulted from both processes. However, firm evidence for impacts of ungulate introductions and translocations is sometimes difficult to find, despite the theoretical likelihood thereof. Such a lack of information may have profound consequences for the effective implementation of policy. Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology Other/Unknown Material Antarc* Antarctic Marion Island Southern Ocean Stellenbosch University: SUNScholar Research Repository Antarctic Southern Ocean The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection Stellenbosch University: SUNScholar Research Repository
op_collection_id ftunstellenbosch
language English
topic barriers
biological invasions
legislation
mammals
propagule pressure
Marion Island
South Africa
spellingShingle barriers
biological invasions
legislation
mammals
propagule pressure
Marion Island
South Africa
Chown, S.L.
Spear, D.
Lee, J.E.
Shaw, J.D.
Animal introductions to southern systems: lessons for ecology and for policy
topic_facet barriers
biological invasions
legislation
mammals
propagule pressure
Marion Island
South Africa
description Numerous animal species have been introduced to areas from which they were previously absent, and many of these have become invasive, with substantial impacts. However, in other cases, impacts are assumed from theory. Empirical demonstrations are uncommon, making evidence-based conservation policy difficult to achieve. Here we review the broader ecological and conservation lessons from recent work on non-indigenous species in two southern systems, the policy implications thereof, and the subsequent changes to policy as a result of this work. First, we discuss invasions in the Antarctic region. Strong relationships exist between numbers of animal invasions and numbers of human visitors to Southern Ocean Islands, abiotic factors are often limiting for introduced species, homogenization across islands differs among taxonomic groups, and control actions can rapidly result in unintended consequences. This knowledge has influenced national policy and decisions within the Antarctic Treaty System. Second, we discuss ungulate introductions and translocations, both in South Africa and elsewhere. We show that substantial homogenization has resulted from both processes. However, firm evidence for impacts of ungulate introductions and translocations is sometimes difficult to find, despite the theoretical likelihood thereof. Such a lack of information may have profound consequences for the effective implementation of policy. Centre of Excellence for Invasion Biology
format Other/Unknown Material
author Chown, S.L.
Spear, D.
Lee, J.E.
Shaw, J.D.
author_facet Chown, S.L.
Spear, D.
Lee, J.E.
Shaw, J.D.
author_sort Chown, S.L.
title Animal introductions to southern systems: lessons for ecology and for policy
title_short Animal introductions to southern systems: lessons for ecology and for policy
title_full Animal introductions to southern systems: lessons for ecology and for policy
title_fullStr Animal introductions to southern systems: lessons for ecology and for policy
title_full_unstemmed Animal introductions to southern systems: lessons for ecology and for policy
title_sort animal introductions to southern systems: lessons for ecology and for policy
publisher Zoological Society of Southern Africa
publishDate 2010
url http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/119924
geographic Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Southern Ocean
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Marion Island
Southern Ocean
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Marion Island
Southern Ocean
op_relation Chown, S.L., Spear, D., Lee, J.E. and Shaw, J.D. (2009). Animal introductions to southern systems: lessons for ecology and for policy. African Zoology, 44(2), 248-262
http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/119924
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