Wayne, part of the challenge in defining invasives is keeping it simple
while making it complete. For example, the word "native" may or may not
cover all invasives. Also, there can be non-human caused introductions or
spread.  
The barred owl is native to North America. Its recent non-human induced
spread in range and its resultant harm to endemic spotted owl populations
would appear to quality it as an invasive, even though it doesn't fit some
of the cited definitions. 
Reed canarygrass may be indigenous but its monocultural takeover of wetlands
means it is classified as an invasive on most lists. Some of its spread has
been due to cultivation use.
So to me, the definition of an invasive is a species whose presence and
spread reduces natural ecosystem qualities such as diversity, productivity,
stability and resilience.  

Warren W. Aney
Senior Wildlife Ecologist
Tigard, OR

-----Original Message-----
From: Ecological Society of America: grants, jobs, news
[mailto:ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU] On Behalf Of Wayne Tyson
Sent: Sunday, 01 May, 2011 18:29
To: ECOLOG-L@LISTSERV.UMD.EDU
Subject: [ECOLOG-L] Science Ecology Terms Definitions Invasive etc.

Ecolog:

Some may find it informative or ill-informative to follow the bouncing links
on this site (they come up as pdf files). 

I am particularly interested in all ecologists' views of the definition of
"invasive species," (here reproduced for your convenience), but there also
are other flaws. Does ESA agree (aside from grammar nit-picking) with the
text of the cited "laws?" 

http://www.iscc.ca.gov/cisac-strategic-framework.html

      INVASIVE SPECIES 


      What is an Invasive Species?

      The ISCC Bylaws define invasive species as "non-native organisms which
cause economic or environmental harm." The bylaws clarify that invasive
species within the scope of the council do not include humans, domestic
livestock or non-harmful exotic organisms.

      This matches the definition established at the federal level by
Executive Order 13112 in 1999, which established the National Invasive
Species Council. It defines invasive species as "alien species whose
introduction does or is likely to cause economic or environmental harm or
harm to human health." The order clarifies that alien species are those
introduced to an area, whether intentionally or unintentionally, as a result
of human activity.

      California Food and Agricultural Code (Section 5260.5) defines
"invasive pests" as "animals, plants, insects, and plant and animal
diseases, or groups of those animals, plants, insects, and plant and animal
diseases, including seeds, eggs, spores, or other matter capable of
propagation for which introduction into California would or likely would
cause economic or environmental harm."

      Invasive species come in all shapes and sizes, and their impacts range
from clogging water pipes to killing wildlife, from ruining crops to posing
a human health hazard. Many organizations are involved in addressing
invasive species in California. The ISCC and CISAC formed to coordinate and
strengthen the efforts of these organizations.
     



WT

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