More Info

Additional information on exotic species is available online from IAGLR, including scientific articles in the Journal of Great Lakes Research and contact information for experts.

IAGLR

IV. Conclusions and Recommendations

  1. Aquatic species invasions continue to pose one of the greatest risks to the health and productivity of our coastal marine ecosystems and the Great Lakes.


  2. A major federal funding increase of at least $30M per year for the Great Lakes region is needed to accelerate progress towards solutions to the problems outlined in this document. The piecemeal and relatively small annual funding requested by the Administration and provided by Congress, and the funds available through Canadian agencies, are not sufficient for substantive progress. Invasive species are no longer just a matter of scientific interest and local concern - they represent a threat to the marine/aquatic biosecurity of the United States, Canada, and the other coastal nations of the world. Invasive species have a direct impact where we live and play, and they affect our standard and style of living in an adverse manner. Winning the invasive species challenge means investing in a reasonable 10-year goal: to eliminate new introductions of aquatic invasive species by 2013. Oceanic shipping (ballast tanks) has been the primary vector for new aquatic species introductions and will continue to be the most significant and high-risk vector until effective treatment technologies are developed, proven, and made suitable for installation and use aboard a variety of large ships.


  3. Without government leadership and funding, availability of approved ballast water/ballast tank treatment technologies is at least a decade away, perhaps longer.


  4. The development of an effective, practical ballast water treatment standard or standards is a major barrier to progress on the development and testing of treatment technologies. The scientific community must become engaged in this issue before the policy community unilaterally sets standards that are not scientifically supportable, or worse, ineffective.


  5. The lack of reliable and flexible full-scale testing platforms is an obstacle to testing promising ballast water treatment technologies. Test platforms, in the form of leased vessels, shore-based test facilities, or MARAD vessels, need to be available for full-scale tests under actual vessel operating conditions.


  6. Given that many of the aquatic invaders that have established in the Great Lakes in recent years originate from Eurasia, an interdiction program based on assessment of potential high-threat invader organisms in European fresh and brackish water systems should be undertaken. This will require international collaboration and cooperation.


  7. Information to track and identify shifts in patterns of trade coming into the Great Lakes should be compiled and maintained on an annual basis.


  8. Increased resources are needed to support aquatic invasion science research, to advance our understanding of the invasion process, the development of reliable risk assessment models, and the ability to identify and evaluate potential future invaders.


  9. Genetic tools to identify relationships among source communities and newly established communities should be emphasized. This is perhaps the best tool we have to demonstrate source-donor relationships.


  10. Although the ballast tank vector remains the highest prevention priority, increased resources should be directed towards other vectors, such as aquaculture, the bait industry, and the aquarium industry.


  11. The barrier between the Mississippi River and the Great Lakes should be maintained and upgraded to prevent movement of exotic species between both ecosystems.

© Copyright 2002 International Association for Great Lakes Research
Site Design by Loracs Creations, Inc.