PLoS ONE (Jan 2019)

Are the ecological effects of the "worst" marine invasive species linked with scientific and media attention?

  • Nathan R Geraldi,
  • Andrea Anton,
  • Catherine E Lovelock,
  • Carlos M Duarte

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0215691
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 4
p. e0215691

Abstract

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Non-native species are a major driver of environmental change. In this study we assessed the ecological impact of the "worst" non-native species and the associated scientific and media publications through time to understand what influences interest in these species. Ecological effect was based on a qualitative assessment reported in research publications and additional searches of the scientific and media attention were conducted to determine published articles and assess attention. We did not detect a relationship between the number of publications for a non-native species and the magnitude of the ecological effects of that species or the number of citations. Media coverage on non-native species was low, only evident for less than 50% of the non-native species assessed. Media coverage was initially related to the number of scientific publications, but was short-lived. In contrast, the attention to individual non-native species in the scientific literature was sustained through time and often continued to increase over time. Time between detection of the non-native species and the scientific/media attention were reduced with each successive introduction to a new geographic location. Tracking publications on non-native species indicated that media attention does seem to be associated with the production of scientific research while scientific attention was not related to the magnitude of the ecological effects.