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Invasion of Coastal Marine Communities in North America: Apparent Patterns, Processes, and Biases
1.1K
Citations
94
References
2000
Year
EngineeringOceanographyApparent PatternsInvasive SpecieMarine BiodiversityInvasion EcologyOceanic SystemsConservation BiologyCoastal Marine CommunitiesBiodiversityGeographyInvasion ResistanceMarine ManagementCoastal ProcessesCoastal ManagementInvasion BiologyEvolutionary BiologyMarine EcologyMarine BiologyNorth America
Marine biological invasions are widespread, with emerging patterns shaped by propagule supply, invasion resistance, and sampling bias, yet standardized quantitative measures across space and time are lacking. The study aims to test the validity of these apparent invasion patterns, given the strong data biases. In North America, 298 nonindigenous invertebrate and algal species were identified, revealing that invasion rates have risen exponentially over 200 years, most species are crustaceans and molluscs, shipping is the primary vector, the Pacific coast hosts more NIS than the Atlantic and Gulf coasts, and source regions vary by coast in line with trade patterns.
▪ Abstract Biological invasions of marine habitats have been common, and many patterns emerge from the existing literature. In North America, we identify 298 nonindigenous species (NIS) of invertebrates and algae that are established in marine and estuarine waters, generating many “apparent patterns” of invasion: (a) The rate of reported invasions has increased exponentially over the past 200 years; (b) Most NIS are crustaceans and molluscs, while NIS in taxonomic groups dominated by small organisms are rare; (c) Most invasions have resulted from shipping; (d) More NIS are present along the Pacific coast than the Atlantic and Gulf coasts; (e) Native and source regions of NIS differ among coasts, corresponding to trade patterns. The validity of these apparent patterns remains to be tested, because strong bias exists in the data. Overall, the emergent patterns reflect interactive effects of propagule supply, invasion resistance, and sampling bias. Understanding the relative contribution of each component remains a major challenge for invasion ecology and requires standardized, quantitative measures in space and time that we now lack.
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