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Invasive alien insects represent a clear but variable threat to biodiversity

journal contribution
posted on 2025-01-13, 02:49 authored by David Clarke, Melodie McGeoch
Invasive alien insects are an important yet understudied component of the general threat that biological invasions pose to biodiversity. We quantified the breadth and level of this threat by performing environmental impact assessments using a modified version of the Environmental Impact Assessment for Alien Taxa (EICAT) framework. This represents the largest effort to date on quantify the environmental impacts of invasive alien insects. Using a relatively large and taxonomically representative set of insect species that have established non-native populations around the globe, we tested hypotheses on: (1) socioeconomic and (2) taxonomic biases, (3) relationship between range size and impact severity and (4) island susceptibility. Socioeconomic pests had marginally more environmental impact information than non-pests and, as expected, impact information was geographically and taxonomically skewed. Species with larger introduced ranges were more likely, on average, to have the most severe local environmental impacts (i.e. a global maximum impact severity of ‘Major’). The island susceptibility hypothesis found no support, and both island and mainland systems experience similar numbers of high severity impacts. These results demonstrate the high variability, both within and across species, in the ways and extents to which invasive insects impact biodiversity, even within the highest profile invaders. However, the environmental impact knowledge base requires greater taxonomic and geographic coverage, so that hypotheses about invasion impact can be developed towards identifying generalities in the biogeography of invasion impacts.

Funding

We acknowledge financial support from the Invasive Species Council, the Ian Potter Foundation, Monash University, the Australian Department of Agriculture, and the Queensland Department of Environment. DAC acknowledges support from an Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) scholarship. DAC and MAM acknowledge support from the ARC SRIEAS Grant SR200100005 Securing Antarctica's Environmental Future. MAM also acknowledges support from an Australian Research Council Discovery Project DP200101680.

History

Publication Date

2023-01-01

Journal

Current Research in Insect Science

Volume

4

Article Number

100065

Pagination

13p.

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

2666-5158

Rights Statement

© 2023 The Authors. Published by Elsevier B.V. This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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