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Risk Management Assessment Improves the Cost-Effectiveness of Invasive Species Prioritisation

SIMPLE SUMMARY: International agreements commit nations to control or eradicate invasive alien species. The scale of this challenge exceeds available resources and so it is essential to prioritise the management of invasive alien species. Species prioritisation for management may consider the likeli...

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Autores principales: Robertson, Peter A., Mill, Aileen C., Adriaens, Tim, Moore, Niall, Vanderhoeven, Sonia, Essl, Franz, Booy, Olaf
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2021
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8698869/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34943234
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology10121320
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author Robertson, Peter A.
Mill, Aileen C.
Adriaens, Tim
Moore, Niall
Vanderhoeven, Sonia
Essl, Franz
Booy, Olaf
author_facet Robertson, Peter A.
Mill, Aileen C.
Adriaens, Tim
Moore, Niall
Vanderhoeven, Sonia
Essl, Franz
Booy, Olaf
author_sort Robertson, Peter A.
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: International agreements commit nations to control or eradicate invasive alien species. The scale of this challenge exceeds available resources and so it is essential to prioritise the management of invasive alien species. Species prioritisation for management may consider the likelihood and scale of impact (risk assessment) and the feasibility, costs and effectiveness of management (risk management). Risk assessment processes are widely used, risk management less so. To assess the cost effectiveness of prioritisation, we considered 26 high-risk species considered for eradication from Great Britain (GB) with pre-existing risk assessment and risk management outputs. We used these to consider the relative reduction in risk per unit cost when managing prioritised species based on different criteria. We showed that the cost effectiveness of prioritisation within our sample using risk assessment scores alone performed no better than a random ranking of the species. In contrast, prioritisation including management feasibility produced nearly two orders of magnitude improvement compared to random ranking. We concluded that basing management actions on priorities based solely on risk assessment without considering management feasibility risks the inefficient use of limited resources. In this study, the cost effectiveness of species prioritisation action was greatly increased by the inclusion of a risk management assessment. ABSTRACT: International agreements commit nations to control or eradicate invasive alien species. The scale of this challenge exceeds available resources and so it is essential to prioritise the management of invasive alien species. Species prioritisation for management typically involves a hierarchy of processes that consider the likelihood and scale of impact (risk assessment) and the feasibility, costs and effectiveness of management (risk management). Risk assessment processes are widely used, risk management less so, but are a crucial component of resource decision making. To assess the cost-effectiveness of prioritisation, we considered 26 high-risk species considered for eradication from Great Britain (GB) with pre-existing risk assessment and risk management outputs. We extracted scores to reflect the overall risk to GB posed by the species, together with the estimated cost and the overall feasibility of eradication. We used these to consider the relative reduction in risk per unit cost when managing prioritised species based on different criteria. We showed that the cost-effectiveness of prioritisation within our sample using risk assessment scores alone, performed no better than a random ranking of the species. In contrast, prioritisation including management feasibility produced nearly two orders of magnitude improvement compared to random. We conclude that basing management actions on priorities based solely on risk assessment without considering management feasibility risks the inefficient use of limited resources. In this study, the cost-effectiveness of species prioritisation for action was greatly increased by the inclusion of risk management assessment.
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spelling pubmed-86988692021-12-24 Risk Management Assessment Improves the Cost-Effectiveness of Invasive Species Prioritisation Robertson, Peter A. Mill, Aileen C. Adriaens, Tim Moore, Niall Vanderhoeven, Sonia Essl, Franz Booy, Olaf Biology (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: International agreements commit nations to control or eradicate invasive alien species. The scale of this challenge exceeds available resources and so it is essential to prioritise the management of invasive alien species. Species prioritisation for management may consider the likelihood and scale of impact (risk assessment) and the feasibility, costs and effectiveness of management (risk management). Risk assessment processes are widely used, risk management less so. To assess the cost effectiveness of prioritisation, we considered 26 high-risk species considered for eradication from Great Britain (GB) with pre-existing risk assessment and risk management outputs. We used these to consider the relative reduction in risk per unit cost when managing prioritised species based on different criteria. We showed that the cost effectiveness of prioritisation within our sample using risk assessment scores alone performed no better than a random ranking of the species. In contrast, prioritisation including management feasibility produced nearly two orders of magnitude improvement compared to random ranking. We concluded that basing management actions on priorities based solely on risk assessment without considering management feasibility risks the inefficient use of limited resources. In this study, the cost effectiveness of species prioritisation action was greatly increased by the inclusion of a risk management assessment. ABSTRACT: International agreements commit nations to control or eradicate invasive alien species. The scale of this challenge exceeds available resources and so it is essential to prioritise the management of invasive alien species. Species prioritisation for management typically involves a hierarchy of processes that consider the likelihood and scale of impact (risk assessment) and the feasibility, costs and effectiveness of management (risk management). Risk assessment processes are widely used, risk management less so, but are a crucial component of resource decision making. To assess the cost-effectiveness of prioritisation, we considered 26 high-risk species considered for eradication from Great Britain (GB) with pre-existing risk assessment and risk management outputs. We extracted scores to reflect the overall risk to GB posed by the species, together with the estimated cost and the overall feasibility of eradication. We used these to consider the relative reduction in risk per unit cost when managing prioritised species based on different criteria. We showed that the cost-effectiveness of prioritisation within our sample using risk assessment scores alone, performed no better than a random ranking of the species. In contrast, prioritisation including management feasibility produced nearly two orders of magnitude improvement compared to random. We conclude that basing management actions on priorities based solely on risk assessment without considering management feasibility risks the inefficient use of limited resources. In this study, the cost-effectiveness of species prioritisation for action was greatly increased by the inclusion of risk management assessment. MDPI 2021-12-12 /pmc/articles/PMC8698869/ /pubmed/34943234 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology10121320 Text en © 2021 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Robertson, Peter A.
Mill, Aileen C.
Adriaens, Tim
Moore, Niall
Vanderhoeven, Sonia
Essl, Franz
Booy, Olaf
Risk Management Assessment Improves the Cost-Effectiveness of Invasive Species Prioritisation
title Risk Management Assessment Improves the Cost-Effectiveness of Invasive Species Prioritisation
title_full Risk Management Assessment Improves the Cost-Effectiveness of Invasive Species Prioritisation
title_fullStr Risk Management Assessment Improves the Cost-Effectiveness of Invasive Species Prioritisation
title_full_unstemmed Risk Management Assessment Improves the Cost-Effectiveness of Invasive Species Prioritisation
title_short Risk Management Assessment Improves the Cost-Effectiveness of Invasive Species Prioritisation
title_sort risk management assessment improves the cost-effectiveness of invasive species prioritisation
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8698869/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/34943234
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/biology10121320
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