Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Soto, Ismael, Courtois, Pierre, Pili, Arman, Tordoni, Enrico, Manfrini, Eléna, Angulo, Elena, Bellard, Céline, Briski, Elizabeta, Buřič, Miloš, Cuthbert, Ross N, Kouba, Antonín, Kourantidou, Melina, Macêdo, Rafael L, Leroy, Boris, Haubrock, Phillip J, Courchamp, Franck, Leung, Brian
Format: Artículo científico
Language:en
Published: Nature ecology & evolution 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40419738/
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1868266198756491265
author Soto, Ismael
Courtois, Pierre
Pili, Arman
Tordoni, Enrico
Manfrini, Eléna
Angulo, Elena
Bellard, Céline
Briski, Elizabeta
Buřič, Miloš
Cuthbert, Ross N
Kouba, Antonín
Kourantidou, Melina
Macêdo, Rafael L
Leroy, Boris
Haubrock, Phillip J
Courchamp, Franck
Leung, Brian
author_facet Soto, Ismael
Courtois, Pierre
Pili, Arman
Tordoni, Enrico
Manfrini, Eléna
Angulo, Elena
Bellard, Céline
Briski, Elizabeta
Buřič, Miloš
Cuthbert, Ross N
Kouba, Antonín
Kourantidou, Melina
Macêdo, Rafael L
Leroy, Boris
Haubrock, Phillip J
Courchamp, Franck
Leung, Brian
Soto, Ismael
Courtois, Pierre
Pili, Arman
Tordoni, Enrico
Manfrini, Eléna
Angulo, Elena
Bellard, Céline
Briski, Elizabeta
Buřič, Miloš
Cuthbert, Ross N
Kouba, Antonín
Kourantidou, Melina
Macêdo, Rafael L
Leroy, Boris
Haubrock, Phillip J
Courchamp, Franck
Leung, Brian
collection PubMed - marine biology
contents Using species ranges and macroeconomic data to fill the gap in costs of biological invasions. Soto, Ismael Courtois, Pierre Pili, Arman Tordoni, Enrico Manfrini, Eléna Angulo, Elena Bellard, Céline Briski, Elizabeta Buřič, Miloš Cuthbert, Ross N Kouba, Antonín Kourantidou, Melina Macêdo, Rafael L Leroy, Boris Haubrock, Phillip J Courchamp, Franck Leung, Brian Introduced Species Biodiversity Conservation of Natural Resources Europe Biological invasions threaten global biodiversity, human well-being and economies. Many regional and taxonomic syntheses of monetary costs have been produced recently but with important knowledge gaps owing to uneven geographic and taxonomic research intensity. Here we combine species distribution models, macroeconomic data and the InvaCost database to produce the highest resolution spatio-temporal cost estimates currently available to bridge these gaps. From a subset of 162 invasive species with 'highly reliable' documented costs at the national level, our interpolation focuses on countries that have not reported any costs despite the known presence of invasive species. This analysis demonstrates a substantial underestimation, with global costs potentially estimated to be 1,646% higher for these species than previously recorded. This discrepancy was uneven geographically and taxonomically, respectively peaking in Europe and for plants. Our results showed that damage costs were primarily driven by gross domestic product, human population size, agricultural area and environmental suitability, whereas management expenditure correlated with gross domestic product and agriculture areas. We also found a lag time for damage costs of 46 years, but management spending was not delayed. The methodological predictive approach of this study provides a more complete view of the economic dimensions of biological invasions and narrows the global disparity in invasion cost reporting.
format Artículo científico
id pubmed_40419738
institution PubMed
language en
publishDate 2025
publisher Nature ecology & evolution
record_format pubmed
spellingShingle Using species ranges and macroeconomic data to fill the gap in costs of biological invasions.
Soto, Ismael
Courtois, Pierre
Pili, Arman
Tordoni, Enrico
Manfrini, Eléna
Angulo, Elena
Bellard, Céline
Briski, Elizabeta
Buřič, Miloš
Cuthbert, Ross N
Kouba, Antonín
Kourantidou, Melina
Macêdo, Rafael L
Leroy, Boris
Haubrock, Phillip J
Courchamp, Franck
Leung, Brian
Introduced Species
Biodiversity
Conservation of Natural Resources
Europe
Using species ranges and macroeconomic data to fill the gap in costs of biological invasions. Soto, Ismael Courtois, Pierre Pili, Arman Tordoni, Enrico Manfrini, Eléna Angulo, Elena Bellard, Céline Briski, Elizabeta Buřič, Miloš Cuthbert, Ross N Kouba, Antonín Kourantidou, Melina Macêdo, Rafael L Leroy, Boris Haubrock, Phillip J Courchamp, Franck Leung, Brian Introduced Species Biodiversity Conservation of Natural Resources Europe Biological invasions threaten global biodiversity, human well-being and economies. Many regional and taxonomic syntheses of monetary costs have been produced recently but with important knowledge gaps owing to uneven geographic and taxonomic research intensity. Here we combine species distribution models, macroeconomic data and the InvaCost database to produce the highest resolution spatio-temporal cost estimates currently available to bridge these gaps. From a subset of 162 invasive species with 'highly reliable' documented costs at the national level, our interpolation focuses on countries that have not reported any costs despite the known presence of invasive species. This analysis demonstrates a substantial underestimation, with global costs potentially estimated to be 1,646% higher for these species than previously recorded. This discrepancy was uneven geographically and taxonomically, respectively peaking in Europe and for plants. Our results showed that damage costs were primarily driven by gross domestic product, human population size, agricultural area and environmental suitability, whereas management expenditure correlated with gross domestic product and agriculture areas. We also found a lag time for damage costs of 46 years, but management spending was not delayed. The methodological predictive approach of this study provides a more complete view of the economic dimensions of biological invasions and narrows the global disparity in invasion cost reporting.
title Using species ranges and macroeconomic data to fill the gap in costs of biological invasions.
topic Introduced Species
Biodiversity
Conservation of Natural Resources
Europe
url https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40419738/