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Published byAmberlynn Shields Modified over 9 years ago
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Biological invasions and the Millennium Assessment: bioeconomic analysis & uncertainty
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200 Cichlid Extinctions
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Unionid Extirpation
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Sea Lamprey Damage
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Ricciardi (in review) Cumulative number of invasions Year
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Relevance Major cause of biodiversity loss Physical and chemical changes Industrial impacts Aesthetics Property values Invasive species cost estimated $137 Billion US/yr (Pimentel et al. 1999)
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Beneficial Introduced Species
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Source Location of Species Abundance Spread Impact Transport/Survival in Pathway Establishment Maximize Societal Welfare EcologyObjective Benefits Costs Bioeconomics
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Source Location of Species Abundance Spread Impact Transport/Survival in Pathway Establishment Value Added Investment Production Prevention Control Maximize Societal Welfare EcologyEconomicsObjective Benefits Costs Transport / Introductions Non-market Values Bioeconomics
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Cost Welfare Cost 25 yr horizon5 yr horizon Time Leung et al. 2002
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Bioeconomics Explicitly incorporate interactions between society, management & ecology Incorporate time scale, GDP, and biological responses Integrate non-market components Challenges Sparse data High uncertainty (ecology, economic valuation) Timely, but appropriate responses
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Uncertainty 3 invasions, 100 lakes examined: p=0.03? Pr=0.57 Pr=0.28 Pr=0.04
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Learning event Effect of New Research Learning event
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Research Directions Flexible frameworks for decision making Ecological forecasting with realistically limited data Integration and evaluation of uncertainty and learning on decisions
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