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Managing biological invasions: the cost of inaction
by
Leung, Brian
, Cuthbert, Ross N
, Leroy, Boris
, Liu, Chunlong
, Diagne, Christophe
, Ahmed, Danish A
, Kourantidou, Melina
, Hudgins, Emma J
, Beidas, Ayah
, Courchamp, Franck
, Haubrock, Phillip J
, Petrovskii, Sergei
in
Aedes
/ Applied mathematics
/ Aquatic insects
/ Biodiversity
/ Biological invasions
/ Biology
/ Cost control
/ Economic impact
/ Efficiency
/ Expenditures
/ Fisheries
/ Introduced species
/ Invasive species
/ Management
/ Mosquitoes
/ Prevention
/ Timing
2022
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Managing biological invasions: the cost of inaction
by
Leung, Brian
, Cuthbert, Ross N
, Leroy, Boris
, Liu, Chunlong
, Diagne, Christophe
, Ahmed, Danish A
, Kourantidou, Melina
, Hudgins, Emma J
, Beidas, Ayah
, Courchamp, Franck
, Haubrock, Phillip J
, Petrovskii, Sergei
in
Aedes
/ Applied mathematics
/ Aquatic insects
/ Biodiversity
/ Biological invasions
/ Biology
/ Cost control
/ Economic impact
/ Efficiency
/ Expenditures
/ Fisheries
/ Introduced species
/ Invasive species
/ Management
/ Mosquitoes
/ Prevention
/ Timing
2022
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While trying to remove the title from your shelf something went wrong :( Kindly try again later!
Do you wish to request the book?
Managing biological invasions: the cost of inaction
by
Leung, Brian
, Cuthbert, Ross N
, Leroy, Boris
, Liu, Chunlong
, Diagne, Christophe
, Ahmed, Danish A
, Kourantidou, Melina
, Hudgins, Emma J
, Beidas, Ayah
, Courchamp, Franck
, Haubrock, Phillip J
, Petrovskii, Sergei
in
Aedes
/ Applied mathematics
/ Aquatic insects
/ Biodiversity
/ Biological invasions
/ Biology
/ Cost control
/ Economic impact
/ Efficiency
/ Expenditures
/ Fisheries
/ Introduced species
/ Invasive species
/ Management
/ Mosquitoes
/ Prevention
/ Timing
2022
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Journal Article
Managing biological invasions: the cost of inaction
2022
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Overview
Ecological and socioeconomic impacts from biological invasions are rapidly escalating worldwide. While effective management underpins impact mitigation, such actions are often delayed, insufficient or entirely absent. Presently, management delays emanate from a lack of monetary rationale to invest at early invasion stages, which precludes effective prevention and eradication. Here, we provide such rationale by developing a conceptual model to quantify the cost of inaction, i.e., the additional expenditure due to delayed management, under varying time delays and management efficiencies. Further, we apply the model to management and damage cost data from a relatively data-rich genus (Aedes mosquitoes). Our model demonstrates that rapid management interventions following invasion drastically minimise costs. We also identify key points in time that differentiate among scenarios of timely, delayed and severely delayed management intervention. Any management action during the severely delayed phase results in substantial losses (>50% of the potential maximum loss). For Aedes spp., we estimate that the existing management delay of 55 years led to an additional total cost of approximately $ 4.57 billion (14% of the maximum cost), compared to a scenario with management action only seven years prior (< 1% of the maximum cost). Moreover, we estimate that in the absence of management action, long-term losses would have accumulated to US$ 32.31 billion, or more than seven times the observed inaction cost. These results highlight the need for more timely management of invasive alien species—either pre-invasion, or as soon as possible after detection—by demonstrating how early investments rapidly reduce long-term economic impacts.
Publisher
Springer Nature B.V
Subject
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