La Trobe

Existing indicators do not adequately monitor progress toward meeting invasive alien species targets

journal contribution
posted on 2025-02-21, 03:53 authored by Joana R. Vicente, AS Vaz, M Roige, M Winter, B Lenzner, David Clarke, Melodie McGeoch
Monitoring the progress parties have made toward meeting global biodiversity targets requires appropriate indicators. The recognition of invasive alien species (IAS) as a biodiversity threat has led to the development of specific targets aiming at reducing their prevalence and impact. However, indicators for adequately monitoring and reporting on the status of biological invasions have been slow to emerge, with those that exist being arguably insufficient. We performed a systematic review of the peer-reviewed literature to assess the adequacy of existing IAS indicators against a range of policy-relevant and scientifically valid properties. We found that very few indicators have most of the desirable properties and that existing indicators are unevenly spread across the components of the Driver-Pressure-State-Response and Theory of Change frameworks. We provide three possible reasons for this: (i) inadequate attention paid to the requirements of an effective IAS indicator, (ii) insufficient data required to populate and inform policy-relevant, scientifically robust indicators, or (iii) deficient investment in the development and maintenance of IAS indicators. This review includes an analysis of where current inadequacies in IAS indicators exist and provides a roadmap for the future development of indicators capable of measuring progress made toward mitigating and halting biological invasions.

Funding

This is a joint effort of the sTWIST (Theory and Workflows for Invasive Species Tracking) synthesis group supported by sDiv, the synthesis center of iDiv, the German Centre for Integrative Biodiversity Research (DFG FZT 118; 202548816), and a contribution under the Species Populations Working Group of the Group on Earth Observations Biodiversity Observation Network (GEO BON; https://geobon.org/ebvs/workinggroups/species-populations). J.R.V. was supported by a research contract DL57/2016/ICETA/EEC2018a/13. M.M. acknowledges Australian Research Council DP 200101680, and M.M. and D.C. the ARC Special Research Initiative in Excellence in Antarctic Science Securing Antarctica's Environmental Future (SR200100005). A.S.V. acknowledges Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovación y Universidades through the 2018 Juan de la Cierva-Formación program (reference: FJC2018-038131-I), and FCT (2020.01175.CEECIND). B.L. acknowledges funding by the Austrian Science Foundation FWF (grant I2086-B16).

History

Publication Date

2022-10-31

Journal

Conservation Letters

Volume

15

Issue

5

Article Number

e12918

Pagination

17p.

Publisher

Wiley

ISSN

1755-263X

Rights Statement

© 2022 The Authors. Conservation Letters published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits use, distribution and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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