Publications by authors named "Sabrina Kumschick"

Article Synopsis
  • Many species have been introduced to new areas for their benefits, but some can cause harm while others may not.
  • Different strategies exist to manage these species, including banning harmful ones, minimizing damage while keeping benefits, or promoting safe species.
  • This article focuses on the "safe list" approach, which identifies low-risk alien species that can be used without worrying about negative effects, and offers guidance on creating and applying these lists for managing biological invasions.
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Article Synopsis
  • - The Environmental Impact Classification for Alien Taxa (EICAT) is a vital standard adopted by the IUCN to assess the environmental effects of non-native species and is being used in various national and local decision-making processes to manage biological invasions effectively.
  • - Recent challenges have arisen regarding EICAT's foundational concepts, especially about the precautionary approach, leading to concerns that some criticisms may hinder global efforts to control invasive species.
  • - EICAT emphasizes the need for proactive management of non-native species due to their role in biodiversity loss and the significant economic and environmental costs associated with ignoring potential impacts, aligning with international biodiversity goals like the Kunming-Montreal Global Biodiversity Framework.
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Article Synopsis
  • Alien species, introduced by humans outside their native habitats, can negatively impact global biodiversity, leading to the need for standardized assessments like the IUCN EICAT.
  • While EICAT focuses on the negative effects, alien species can also have positive impacts, such as providing food or habitat, but there was no established system to measure these benefits.
  • To address this, the proposed EICAT+ framework categorizes positive impacts through five scenarios and helps enhance our understanding of biological invasions, aiding in better conservation strategies.
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Background And Aims: Since its emergence in the mid-20th century, invasion biology has matured into a productive research field addressing questions of fundamental and applied importance. Not only has the number of empirical studies increased through time, but also has the number of competing, overlapping and, in some cases, contradictory hypotheses about biological invasions. To make these contradictions and redundancies explicit, and to gain insight into the field's current theoretical structure, we developed and applied a Delphi approach to create a consensus network of 39 existing invasion hypotheses.

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The family Cactaceae Juss. contains some of the most widespread and damaging invasive alien plant species in the world, with Australia (39 species), South Africa (35) and Spain (24) being the main hotspots of invasion. The Global Cactus Working Group (IOBC GCWG) was launched in 2015 to improve international collaboration and identify key actions that can be taken to limit the impacts caused by cactus invasions worldwide.

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The study and management of emerging infectious diseases (EIDs) and of biological invasions both address the ecology of human-associated biological phenomena in a rapidly changing world. However, the two fields work mostly in parallel rather than in concert. This review explores how the general phenomenon of an organism rapidly increasing in range or abundance is caused, highlights the similarities and differences between research on EIDs and invasions, and discusses shared management insights and approaches.

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Alien gastropods have caused extensive harm to biodiversity and socioeconomic systems like agriculture and horticulture worldwide. For conservation and management purposes, information on impacts needs to be easily interpretable and comparable, and the factors that determine impacts understood. This study aimed to assess gastropods alien to South Africa to compare impact severity between species and understand how they vary between habitats and mechanisms.

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Alien species can have major ecological and socioeconomic impacts in their novel ranges and so effective management actions are needed. However, management can be contentious and create conflicts, especially when stakeholders who benefit from alien species are different from those who incur costs. Such conflicts of interests mean that management strategies can often not be implemented.

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Article Synopsis
  • Some alien species have significant negative impacts on native environments, leading to the need for their regulation and management, but choosing which species to target can be challenging.
  • The Environmental Impact Classification for Alien Taxa (EICAT) is a tool designed to score the impacts of alien species, yet its effectiveness can be influenced by the bias of the assessors.
  • Two independent studies comparing EICAT outcomes found that differences in literature search strategies largely accounted for discrepancies, highlighting the need for comprehensive assessments to reduce bias and improve data utility for management purposes.
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Article Synopsis
  • Alien species can harm the environment and economies, prompting administrations to prevent new introductions, control existing populations, and mitigate their impacts.
  • A new Generic Impact Scoring System (GISS) ranks alien species by their potential damage using 12 impact categories, scored on a scale from 0 to 5.
  • GISS has been successfully applied to 349 species and is noted for its simplicity, cost-effectiveness, and broad applicability compared to 22 other impact assessment methods.
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Invasive alien species can have serious adverse impacts on both the environment and the economy. Being able to predict the impacts of an alien species could assist in preventing or reducing these impacts. This study aimed to establish whether there are any life history traits consistently correlated with the impacts of alien birds across two continents, Europe and Australia, as a first step toward identifying life history traits that may have the potential to be adopted as predictors of alien bird impacts.

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Species moved by human activities beyond the limits of their native geographic ranges into areas in which they do not naturally occur (termed aliens) can cause a broad range of significant changes to recipient ecosystems; however, their impacts vary greatly across species and the ecosystems into which they are introduced. There is therefore a critical need for a standardised method to evaluate, compare, and eventually predict the magnitudes of these different impacts. Here, we propose a straightforward system for classifying alien species according to the magnitude of their environmental impacts, based on the mechanisms of impact used to code species in the International Union for Conservation of Nature (IUCN) Global Invasive Species Database, which are presented here for the first time.

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Non-native species cause changes in the ecosystems to which they are introduced. These changes, or some of them, are usually termed impacts; they can be manifold and potentially damaging to ecosystems and biodiversity. However, the impacts of most non-native species are poorly understood, and a synthesis of available information is being hindered because authors often do not clearly define impact.

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We study how species richness of arthropods relates to theories concerning net primary productivity, ambient energy, water-energy dynamics and spatial environmental heterogeneity. We use two datasets of arthropod richness with similar spatial extents (Scandinavia to Mediterranean), but contrasting spatial grain (local habitat and country). Samples of ground-dwelling spiders, beetles, bugs and ants were collected from 32 paired habitats at 16 locations across Europe.

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