Economic costs of invasive bivalves in freshwater ecosystems.

Haubrock, Phillip J., Cuthbert, Ross N. , Ricciardi, Anthony, Diagne, Christophe and Courchamp, Franck (2022) Economic costs of invasive bivalves in freshwater ecosystems. Open Access Diversity and Distributions, 28 (5). pp. 1010-1021. DOI 10.1111/ddi.13501.

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Abstract

Aim:
To assess spatio-temporal and taxonomic patterns of available information on the costs of invasive freshwater bivalves, as well as to identify knowledge gaps.
Location:
Global.
Time period:
1980–2020.
Taxon studied:
Bivalvia.
Methods:
We synthesize published global economic costs of impacts from freshwater bivalves using the InvaCost database and associated R package, explicitly considering the reliability of estimation methodologies, cost types, economic sectors and impacted regions.
Results:
Cumulative total global costs of invasive macrofouling bivalves were $ 63.7 billion (2017 US$) across all regions and socio-economic sectors between 1980 and 2020. Costs were heavily biased taxonomically and spatially, dominated by two families, Dreissenidae and Cyrenidae (Corbiculidae), and largely reported in North America. The greatest share of reported costs ($ 31.5 billion) did not make the distinction between damage and management. However, of those that did, damages and resource losses were one order of magnitude higher ($ 30.5 billion) than control or preventative measures ($ 1.7 billion). Moreover, although many impacted socio-economic sectors lacked specification, the largest shares of costs were incurred by authorities and stakeholders ($ 27.7 billion, e.g., public and private sector interventions) and through impacts on public and social welfare ($ 10.1 billion, e.g., via power/drinking water plant and irrigation system damage) in North America. Average cost estimates over the entire period amounted to approximately $ 1.6 billion per year, most of which was incurred in North America.
Main conclusions:
Our results highlight the burgeoning economic threat caused by invasive freshwater bivalves, offering a strong economic incentive to invest in preventative management such as biosecurity and rapid response eradications. Even if the damages and resource losses are severely understated because economic impacts are lacking for most invaded countries and invasive bivalve species, these impacts are substantial and likely growing

Document Type: Article
Keywords: Cyrenidae; Dreissenidae; InvaCost; macrofouling; mussel; non-native; socio-economic impact
Research affiliation: OceanRep > GEOMAR > FB3 Marine Ecology > FB3-EOE-B Experimental Ecology - Benthic Ecology
Main POF Topic: PT6: Marine Life
Refereed: Yes
Open Access Journal?: Yes
Publisher: Wiley
Date Deposited: 09 Mar 2022 09:30
Last Modified: 07 Feb 2024 15:39
URI: https://oceanrep.geomar.de/id/eprint/55467

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