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Recommendations on methods for the detection and control of biological pollution in marine coastal waters ArchiMer
Olenin, Sergej; Elliott, Michael; Bysveen, Ingrid; Culverhouse, Phil F.; Daunys, Darius; Dubelaar, George B. J.; Gollasch, Stephan; Goulletquer, Philippe; Jelmert, Anders; Kantor, Yuri; Mezeth, Kjersti Bringsvor; Minchin, Dan; Occhipinti-ambrogi, Anna; Olenina, Irina; Vandekerkhove, Jochen.
Adverse effects of invasive alien species (IAS), or biological pollution, is an increasing problem in marine coastal waters, which remains high on the environmental management agenda. All maritime countries need to assess the size of this problem and consider effective mechanisms to prevent introductions, and if necessary and where possible to monitor, contain, control or eradicate the introduced impacting organisms. Despite this, and in contrast to more enclosed water bodies, the openness of marine systems indicates that once species are in an area then eradication is usually impossible. Most institutions in countries are aware of the problem and have sufficient governance in place for management. However, there is still a general lack of commitment and...
Tipo: Text Palavras-chave: Biological invasion; Research needs; Monitoring; Management.
Ano: 2011 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00043/15465/12842.pdf
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Alien Species Alert: Ensis directus. Current statuts of invasions by the marine bivalve Ensis directus ArchiMer
Gollasch, Stephan; Kerckhof, Francis; Craeymeersch, Johan; Goulletquer, Philippe; Jensen, Kathe; Jelmert, Anders; Minchin, Dan.
The North American bivalve mollusc Ensis directus (Conrad, 1843) (Bivalvia, Pharidae) is native to the Northwest Atlantic coasts from southern Labrador to northern Florida (Bousfield, 1960; Theroux and Wigley, 1983; Swennen et al., 1985; Abbott and Morris, 2001; Turgeon et al., 2009; Vierna et al., 2013). This species has been introduced outside its native range, with the first confirmed record from the German Bight in 1979 (Cosel et al., 1982). Thereafter, a subsequent secondary range expansion took place, and the species is presently known to occur from Spain to Norway, including the UK (e.g. ühlenhardt - Siegel et al., 1983; Essink, 1985, 1986; Kerckhof and Dumoulin; 1987, Luczak et al., 1993; Rasmussen, 1996; Brattegard and Holthe, 1997; Eno et al.,...
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Ano: 2015 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00269/38007/36090.pdf
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Status of introductions of non-indigenous marine species to the North Atlantic and adjacent waters 2003–2007 ArchiMer
Pederson, Judith; Gollasch, Stephan; Laing, Ian; Mccollin, Tracy; Miossec, Laurence; Occhipinti-ambrogi, Anna; Wallentinus, Inger; Werner, Malin.
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Ano: 2017 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00397/50796/51683.pdf
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Alien Species Alert: Didemnum vexillum Kott, 2002: Invasion, impact, and control ArchiMer
Mckenzie, Cynthia; Reid, Vanessa; Lambert, Gretchen; Matheson, Kyle; Minchin, Dan; Pederson, Judith; Brown, Lyndsay; Curd, Amelia; Gollasch, Stephan; Goulletquer, Philippe; Occhipinti-ambrogi, Anna; Simard, Nathalie; Therriault, Thomas.
Didemnum vexillum Kott (2002) is a high-impact, globally-invasive, colonial tunicate species that is native to Japan (Lambert, 2009; Stefaniak et al., 2012). It is generally a temperate cold-water organism, and its introduced range currently includes New Zealand, the Netherlands, France, Ireland, United Kingdom, Spain, Italy, and both the west and east coasts of the United States and Canada (Lambert, 2009; Stefaniak et al., 2012; Tagliapietra et al., 2012; Ordóñez et al., 2015, Vercaemer et al., 2015). Like other invasive tunicates, D. vexillum has the capacity to reproduce rapidly, outcompete native species, deteriorate environmental integrity, and cause significant economic harm (Lambert, 2005; Blum et al., 2007; Daniel and Therriault, 2007; Langyel et...
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Ano: 2017 URL: http://archimer.ifremer.fr/doc/00378/48888/49327.pdf
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