《IUCN Guidelines for the Prevention of Biodiversity Loss caused by Alien Invasive Species》.pdf
文本预览下载声明
IUCN GUIDELINES FOR THE PREVENTION OF BIODIVERSITY LOSS
CAUSED BY ALIEN INVASIVE SPECIES
Prepared by the SSC Invasive Species Specialist Group
Approved by the 51st Meeting of the IUCN Council, Gland Switzerland, February 2000
1. BACKGROUND(1)
Biological diversity faces many threats throughout the world. One of the major threats to native biological diversity
is now acknowledged by scientists and governments to be biological invasions caused by alien invasive species.
The impacts of alien invasive species are immense, insidious, and usually irreversible. They may be as damaging
to native species and ecosystems on a global scale as the loss and degradation of habitats.
For millennia, the natural barriers of oceans, mountains, rivers and deserts provided the isolation essential for
unique species and ecosystems to evolve. In just a few hundred years these barriers have been rendered
ineffective by major global forces that combined to help alien species travel vast distances to new habitats and
become alien invasive species. The globalisation and growth in the volume of trade and tourism, coupled with the
emphasis on free trade, provide more opportunities than ever before for species to be spread accidentally or
deliberately. Customs and quarantine practices, developed in an earlier time to guard against human and
economic diseases and pests, are often inadequate safeguards against species that threaten native biodiversity.
Thus the inadvertent ending of millions of years of biological isolation has created major ongoing problems that
affect developed and developing countries.
The scope and cost of biological alien invasions is global and enormous, in both ecological and economic terms.
Alien invasive species are found in all taxonomic groups: they include introduced viruses, fungi, algae, mosses,
ferns, higher plants, invertebrates, fish, amphibians, reptiles, birds and mammals. They have invaded and affected
native biota in virtually every ecosyst
显示全部