Non-Indigenous Species Dynamics in Time and Space within the Coastal Waters of The Netherlands

Author:

Gittenberger Arjan12ORCID,Rensing Marjolein1,Faasse Marco23,van Walraven Lodewijk4,Smolders Sander56,Keeler Perez Helena1,Gittenberger Edmund12

Affiliation:

1. GiMaRIS, Rijksstraatweg 75, 2171 AK Sassenheim, The Netherlands

2. Naturalis Biodiversity Center, Darwinweg 2, 2333 CR Leiden, The Netherlands

3. Eurofins AquaSense, Korringaweg 7, 4401 NT Yerseke, The Netherlands

4. Wageningen Marine Research, 1780 AB Den Helder, The Netherlands

5. Office for Risk Assessment and Research, Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality, 3540 AA Utrecht, The Netherlands

6. Ministry of Infrastructure and Water Management, 2515 XP The Hague, The Netherlands

Abstract

Information on temporal and spatial trends with regard to the introduction of non-indigenous species (NIS) is often sparsely available. These trends may potentially help improve the design and focus of monitoring programs, give insights into new pathways and hotspots, and facilitate horizon scanning. We provide an overview of 215 marine and brackish water NIS recorded in The Netherlands. Temporal trends over the most recent three decades for taxonomic groups, species origin, introduction vectors, and water systems were analysed. We attempt to explain the observed patterns and discuss factors that hamper their explanation. A shift in the region of origin from Pacific to W Atlantic can potentially be linked to legislation prohibiting Pacific oyster imports, whereas a subsequent shift backwards cannot. Case studies illustrate that NIS may not be first detected in the water systems where they were originally introduced. Additionally, it is shown that changes in allegedly native species’ distribution or seasonal pattern should be linked to an introduced cryptic NIS instead. We also discuss the shortcomings of monitoring programs that were originally not focused on NIS, the importance of naturalists’ observations, and the added value of a more recent network that is focused on NIS detection in the coastal waters of The Netherlands.

Funder

Office for Risk Assessment and Research of The Netherlands Food and Consumer Product Safety Authority of the Ministry of Agriculture, Nature and Food Quality

Publisher

MDPI AG

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Agricultural and Biological Sciences (miscellaneous),Ecological Modeling,Ecology

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