Volume 2 - SUPPLEMENT of ABSTRACTS
RISK ASSESSMENT PROTOCOL FOR INVASIVE ALIEN SPECIES: EXAMPLE OF PLOTOSUS LINEATUS
- Argyro Zenetos
Hellenic Centre for Marine Research, Institute of Marine Biological Resources & Inland waters, Attiki, GREECE
zenetos@hcmr.gr
- Marika Galanidi
Dokuz Eylül University, Institute of Marine Sciences and Technology, İzmir, TURKEY
Keywords: Risk assessment protocol, invasive alien species, Plotosus lineatus
Abstract
The EU Regulation No 1143/2014 and other international agreements including the
Convention on Biological Diversity, require that the risks posed by invasive Alien species (IAS),
present or future, are assessed. Indeed risk assessments underpin IAS policies in many ways:
informing legislation; providing justification of restrictions in trade or consumer activities;
prioritising surveillance and rapid response. From a review of existing risk assessment protocols
developed and used widely, it was decided that the most appropriate is the NARPA protocol,
modified by the UK, and refined during an EU study aiming at developing risk assessments to
tackle priority species and enhance prevention. A first list of IAS published in 2016 included 37
species of EU concern, none marine. This was revised in 2017 with the addition of 12 more species,
again no marine. Considering the threat Plotosus lineatus poses to EU marine waters, it was
selected as a potential candidate for the list of IAS of EU concern. The new protocol (EU NonNative Organism Risk Assessment Scheme) was applied to assess the likelihood of its introduction,
establishment, spread and impacts. The new RA Protocol is rigorous and detailed and requires
information from a vast array of different sources to make an informed assessment of the likely
future distribution of the species, identify and quantify to the best possible extent the involved
commodities and stakeholders and assess potential management methods. Knowledge gaps and
areas of urgent research are highlighted and were predictably notable for a new invader such as
Plotosus lineatus. At the same time, a recent invasion presents a higher potential for more effective
intervention and management measures, which are thoroughly addressed by a dedicated section of
the protocol.