Invasive Species in a Globalized World: Ecological, Social, and Legal Perspectives on Policy
Invasive Species in a Globalized World: Ecological, Social, and Legal Perspectives on Policy
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Abstract
We live in a globalized world in which people and goods are transported across ecosystem boundaries in greater volumes and faster than ever before. One consequence of globalization has been the introduction, establishment, and spread of many thousands of species beyond the ecosystems in which they evolved. Many of these species cause harm, and are referred to as invasive. This sub-set of non-native species is now recognized to be one of the largest global drivers of environmental change, and policy is being developed at local, national and international scales to address the issues. Enacting policies that will successfully reduce the impacts of invasive species requires contributions from economists, ecologists, legal scholars, historians, engineers, and many more. Many experts from these disciplines are working on invasive species, but this work has rarely crossed disciplinary boundaries. This book brings together experts from many disciplines to present multi-disciplinary perspectives on the impacts of invasive species, and how policy can be created and enacted to reduce those impacts.
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Front Matter
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One
Working across Disciplines to Understand and Manage Invasive Species
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21Section I Of Toads, Squirrels, Carps, and Kids: How Science and Human Perceptions Drive Our Responses to Invasive Species
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Two
The Ecological, Evolutionary, and Social Impact of Invasive Cane Toads in Australia
Richard Shine
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Three
A Tale of Two Squirrels: A British Case Study of the Sociocultural Dimensions of Debates over Invasive Species
Peter Coates
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Four
Fish Tales: Optimism and Other Bias in Rhetoric about Exotic Carps in America
Glenn Sandiford
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Five
“Sooper” Impact: Drawing the Attention of Kids to the Dangers of Invasive Species
Mark Newman
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Two
The Ecological, Evolutionary, and Social Impact of Invasive Cane Toads in Australia
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113Section II Here They Come: Understanding and Managing the Introduction of Invasive Species
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Six
Patterns of Live Vertebrate Importation into the United States: Analysis of an Invasion Pathway
Christina Romagosa
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Seven
All in the Family: Relatedness and the Success of Introduced Species
Marc W. Cadotte andLanna S. Jin
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Eight
Reducing Damaging Introductions from International Species Trade through Invasion Risk Assessment
Michael Springborn
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Six
Patterns of Live Vertebrate Importation into the United States: Analysis of an Invasion Pathway
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183Section III Controlling the Bad: Reducing the Impacts of Established Invaders
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Nine
Evaluating the Economic Costs and Benefits of Slowing the Spread of Emerald Ash Borer
Jonathan Bossenbroek and others
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Ten
Climate Change Challenges in the Management of Invasive Sea Lamprey in Lake Superior
James F. Kitchell and others
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Eleven
Ecological Separation without Hydraulic Separation: Engineering Solutions to Control Invasive Common Carp in Australian Rivers
Robert Keller
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Twelve
Does Enemy Release Contribute to the Success of Invasive Species? A Review of the Enemy Release Hypothesis
Kirsten M. Prior andJessica J. Hellmann
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Nine
Evaluating the Economic Costs and Benefits of Slowing the Spread of Emerald Ash Borer
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281Section IV Where To from Here? Policy Prospects at International, National, and Regional Levels
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Thirteen
From Global to Local: Integrating Policy Frameworks for the Prevention and Management of Invasive Species
Stanley W. Burgiel
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Fourteen
Developing Invasive Species Policy for a Major Free Trade Bloc: Challenges and Progress in the European Union
Clare Shine
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Fifteen
There Ought to Be a Law! The Peculiar Absence of Broad Federal Harmful Nonindigenous Species Legislation
Marc L. Miller
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Sixteen
Pathways toward a Policy of Preventing New Great Lakes Invasions
Joel Brammeier andThom Cmar
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Seventeen
Final Thoughts: Nature and Human Nature
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Thirteen
From Global to Local: Integrating Policy Frameworks for the Prevention and Management of Invasive Species
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End Matter
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