Bridging aquatic invasive species threats across multiple sectors through One Biosecurity
Authors
Date
2024-07
Type
Journal Article
Keywords
Fields of Research
ANZSRC::300501 Aquaculture, ANZSRC::300307 Environmental studies in animal production, ANZSRC::410305 Environmental marine biotechnology, ANZSRC::410401 Conservation and biodiversity, ANZSRC::410202 Biosecurity science and invasive species ecology, ANZSRC::401104 Health and ecological risk assessment, ANZSRC::31 Biological sciences, ANZSRC::41 Environmental sciences
Abstract
Understanding the magnitude of biosecurity risks in aquatic environments is increasingly complex and urgent because increasing volumes of international shipping, rising demand for aquaculture products, and growth in the global aquarium trade, are accelerating invasive alien species spread worldwide. These threats are especially pressing amid climate and biodiversity crises. However, global and national biosecurity systems are poorly prepared to respond because of fragmented research and policy environments, that often fail to account for risks across sectors or across stakeholder needs and fail to recognize similarities in the processes underpinning biological invasions. In the present article, we illustrate the complex network of links between biosecurity threats across human, animal, plant, and environment sectors and propose a universal approach to risk assessment. One Biosecurity is a holistic, interdisciplinary approach that minimizes biosecurity risks across human, animal, plant, algal, and ecosystem health and is critical to reduce redundancy and increase cross-sectoral cohesion to improve policy, management, and research in aquatic biosecurity.
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© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the American Institute of Biological Sciences.
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