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Invasive species: The categorization of wildlife in science, policy, and wildlife management

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Species categories commonly used in nature conservation, such as protected, endangered, reintroduced,or invasive, are open to various interpretations that can result in diverging and sometimes serious con-sequences. This is vividly apparent with respect to invasiveness because the categorization of speciesand individual animals as invasive impacts on how they are treated in practice. This article demonstrateshow different constructions of invasiveness in science, policy, and wildlife management can be tracedback to different assessments of the origin, behavior, and impact of the invasives. Specifically, the focus ison the different conceptions of space and the role of data in the categorization of invasives. We find that,in science and policy, invasiveness is constructed mainly in terms of the origin and impact of invasivesbut that these domains differ in how they treat space in their assessment of origin: whereas scienceuses ecological spaces, such as biogeographical regions, to assess whether a species belongs to, or isinvasive in, a certain area, policy uses policy spaces such as countries or states to do so. In assessing theimpact of invasives, science argues about including it in its definition, whereas policy requires detaileddata about ecological, societal, and economic damage in order to take action. In wildlife management,the focus in the construction of invasiveness shifts from origin and impact to behavior of invasives. Thisrequires detailed data about where the invasives are, where they are going, and what they are doing.By showing the dynamic and context-specific nature of the construction of invasiveness, the article con-tributes to ongoing research about classifications of nature, their difficulties and ambiguities, and theirimplementation and consequences in practice.
Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)204-212
JournalLand Use Policy
Volume38
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2014

Keywords

  • natural-environment
  • biological invasion
  • yellowstone
  • reintroduction
  • biodiversity
  • terminology
  • networks
  • nativism
  • scotland
  • threaten

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