An essay published in the June 8 issue of Nature is causing something of a 
stir. Eighteen ecologists who signed the essay, titled "Don't judge species on 
their origins," "argue that conservationists should assess organisms based on 
their impact on the local environment, rather than simply whether they're 
native," as described in a recent Scientific American podcast.

In the essay, Mark Davis from Macalester College, St. Paul, Minnesota and 
colleagues argue that adherence to the idea of non-natives as "the enemy" is 
more a reflection of "prejudice rather than solid science," wrote Brandon Keim 
in a Wired Science article. As the authors wrote, the "preoccupation with the 
native-alien dichotomy" among scientists, land managers and policy-makers is 
prohibitive to dynamic and pragmatic conservation and species management in a 
21st century planet that is forever altered by climate change, land-use changes 
and other anthropogenic influences. As a result of this misguided 
preoccupation, claim the authors, time and resources are unnecessarily spent 
attempting to eradicate introduced species that actually turn out to be a boon 
to the environment; the authors cite the non-native tamarisk tree in the 
western U.S. as an example of this...

Read more and comment at 
http://www.esa.org/esablog/ecologist-2/speaking-of-species-and-their-origins/ 

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