NeoBiota (Jul 2021)

Economic costs of biological invasions within North America

  • Robert Crystal-Ornelas,
  • Emma J. Hudgins,
  • Ross N. Cuthbert,
  • Phillip J. Haubrock,
  • Jean Fantle-Lepczyk,
  • Elena Angulo,
  • Andrew M. Kramer,
  • Liliana Ballesteros-Mejia,
  • Boris Leroy,
  • Brian Leung,
  • Eugenia López-López,
  • Christophe Diagne,
  • Franck Courchamp

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3897/neobiota.67.58038
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 67
pp. 485 – 510

Abstract

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Invasive species can have severe impacts on ecosystems, economies, and human health. Though the economic impacts of invasions provide important foundations for management and policy, up-to-date syntheses of these impacts are lacking. To produce the most comprehensive estimate of invasive species costs within North America (including the Greater Antilles) to date, we synthesized economic impact data from the recently published InvaCost database. Here, we report that invasions have cost the North American economy at least US$ 1.26 trillion between 1960 and 2017. Economic costs have climbed over recent decades, averaging US$ 2 billion per year in the early 1960s to over US$ 26 billion per year in the 2010s. Of the countries within North America, the United States (US) had the highest recorded costs, even after controlling for research effort within each country ($5.81 billion per cost source in the US). Of the taxa and habitats that could be classified in our database, invasive vertebrates were associated with the greatest costs, with terrestrial habitats incurring the highest monetary impacts. In particular, invasive species cumulatively (from 1960–2017) cost the agriculture and forestry sectors US$ 527.07 billion and US$ 34.93 billion, respectively. Reporting issues (e.g., data quality or taxonomic granularity) prevented us from synthesizing data from all available studies. Furthermore, very few of the known invasive species in North America had reported economic costs. Therefore, while the costs to the North American economy are massive, our US$ 1.26 trillion estimate is likely very conservative. Accordingly, expanded and more rigorous economic cost reports are necessary to provide more comprehensive invasion impact estimates, and then support data-based management decisions and actions towards species invasions.