4.4 Article

Modelling the damage costs of invasive alien species

期刊

BIOLOGICAL INVASIONS
卷 24, 期 7, 页码 1949-1972

出版社

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s10530-021-02586-5

关键词

Biological invasions; Cost modelling; InvaCost; Logistic growth; Non-native species; Population dynamics; Resource damages; Socioeconomic impacts

资金

  1. Kuwait Foundation for the Advancement of Sciences (KFAS) [PR1914SM-01]
  2. Gulf University for Science and Technology (GUST) internal seed fund [187092]
  3. Alexander von Humboldt Foundation
  4. BiodivERsA-Belmont Forum Project Alien Scenarios' (BMBF/PT) [DLR 01LC1807C]
  5. InEECNRS [3647 CNRS]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The rate of biological invasions is rapidly increasing, posing a threat to global ecological and economic systems. This study developed a novel mathematical model to analyze the temporal trends of invasion costs based on population dynamics. The results revealed fundamental differences in cost dynamics among different genera, influenced by invasion duration, species ecology, and economic sectors impacted.
The rate of biological invasions is growing unprecedentedly, threatening ecological and socioeconomic systems worldwide. Quantitative understandings of invasion temporal trajectories are essential to discern current and future economic impacts of invaders, and then to inform future management strategies. Here, we examine the temporal trends of cumulative invasion costs by developing and testing a novel mathematical model with a population dynamical approach based on logistic growth. This model characterises temporal cost developments into four curve types (I-IV), each with distinct mathematical and qualitative properties, allowing for the parameterization of maximum cumulative costs, carrying capacities and growth rates. We test our model using damage cost data for eight genera (Rattus, Aedes, Canis, Oryctolagus, Sturnus, Ceratitis, Sus and Lymantria) extracted from the InvaCost database-which is the most up-to-date and comprehensive global compilation of economic cost estimates associated with invasive alien species. We find fundamental differences in the temporal dynamics of damage costs among genera, indicating they depend on invasion duration, species ecology and impacted sectors of economic activity. The fitted cost curves indicate a lack of broadscale support for saturation between invader density and impact, including for Canis, Oryctolagus and Lymantria, whereby costs continue to increase with no sign of saturation. For other taxa, predicted saturations may arise from data availability issues resulting from an underreporting of costs in many invaded regions. Overall, this population dynamical approach can produce cost trajectories for additional existing and emerging species, and can estimate the ecological parameters governing the linkage between population dynamics and cost dynamics.

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