posted on 2025-02-17, 02:07authored byCharles B. van Rees, BK Hand, SC Carter, C Bargeron, TJ Cline, W Daniel, JA Ferrante, K Gaddis, ME Hunter, CS Jarnevich, Melodie McGeoch, JT Morisette, ME Neilson, HE Roy, MA Rozance, A Sepulveda, RD Wallace, D Whited, T Wilcox, JS Kimball, G Luikart
Invasive alien species (IAS) are a rising threat to biodiversity, national security, and regional economies, with impacts in the hundreds of billions of U.S. dollars annually. Proactive or predictive approaches guided by scientific knowledge are essential to keeping pace with growing impacts of invasions under climate change. Although the rapid development of diverse technologies and approaches has produced tools with the potential to greatly accelerate invasion research and management, innovation has far outpaced implementation and coordination. Technological and methodological syntheses are urgently needed to close the growing implementation gap and facilitate interdisciplinary collaboration and synergy among evolving disciplines. A broad review is necessary to demonstrate the utility and relevance of work in diverse fields to generate actionable science for the ongoing invasion crisis. Here, we review such advances in relevant fields including remote sensing, epidemiology, big data analytics, environmental DNA (eDNA) sampling, genomics, and others, and present a generalized framework for distilling existing and emerging data into products for proactive IAS research and management. This integrated workflow provides a pathway for scientists and practitioners in diverse disciplines to contribute to applied invasion biology in a coordinated, synergistic, and scalable manner.
Funding
This research was funded in part by NASA award #80NSSC19K0185 to G.L. and B.K.H. and a USGS Northwest Climate Adaptation Science Center Fellowship G17AC000218 to C.B.v.R., G.L. and B.K.H. were also supported by an NSF-DoB award #1639014. H.E.R. is supported by the Natural Environment Research Council award number NE/R016429/1 as part of the UK-SCAPE programme delivering National Capability. H.E.R. also acknowledges COST Action CA17122 – Alien CSI supported by COST (European Cooperation in Science and Technology) www.cost.eu. M.A.M. acknowledges support from the Australian Research Council (DP200101680).