Invasive alien species (IAS) are one of the most severe threats to biodiversity and are the subject of varying degrees of surveillance activity. Predictive early warning systems (EWS), incorporating automated surveillance of relevant dataflows, warning generation and dissemination to decision makers are a key target for developing effective management around IAS, alongside more conventional early detection and horizon scanning technologies. Sophisticated modelling frameworks including the definition of the ‘risky’ species pool, and pathway analysis at the macro and micro-scale are increasingly available to support decision making and to help prioritise risks from different regions and/or taxa. The main challenges in constructing such frameworks, to be applied to border inspections, are (i) the lack of standardisation and integration of the associated complex digital data environments and (ii) effective integration into the decision making process, ensuring that risk information is disseminated in an actionable way to frontline surveillance staff and other decision makers. To truly achieve early warning in biosecurity requires close collaboration between developers and end-users to ensure that generated warnings are duly considered by decision makers, reflect best practice, scientific understanding and the working environment facing frontline actors. Progress towards this goal will rely on openness and mutual understanding of the role of EWS in IAS risk management, as much as on developments in the underlying technologies for surveillance and modelling procedures.
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December 2020
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The cover of this Emerging Topics in Life Sciences special issue, Biosecurity: tools, behaviours and concepts is a Met Office infographic devised to highlight the role of meteorology in biosecurity as outlined in the paper “Use of meteorological data in biosecurity”. By fusing together multiple forms of science communication, the Met Office hope to expand the reach of science beyond the conventional research community.
Review Article|
August 05 2020
Early warning systems in biosecurity; translating risk into action in predictive systems for invasive alien species
James Rainford
;
Fera Science Ltd, York Biotech Campus, York, U.K.
Correspondence: James Rainford ([email protected])
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Andrew Crowe;
Andrew Crowe
Fera Science Ltd, York Biotech Campus, York, U.K.
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Glyn Jones;
Glyn Jones
Fera Science Ltd, York Biotech Campus, York, U.K.
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Femke van den Berg
Femke van den Berg
Fera Science Ltd, York Biotech Campus, York, U.K.
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Publisher: Portland Press Ltd
Received:
June 05 2020
Revision Received:
July 15 2020
Accepted:
July 16 2020
Online ISSN: 2397-8562
Print ISSN: 2397-8554
© 2020 The Author(s). Published by Portland Press Limited on behalf of the Biochemical Society and the Royal Society of Biology
2020
Emerg Top Life Sci (2020) 4 (5): 453–462.
Article history
Received:
June 05 2020
Revision Received:
July 15 2020
Accepted:
July 16 2020
Citation
James Rainford, Andrew Crowe, Glyn Jones, Femke van den Berg; Early warning systems in biosecurity; translating risk into action in predictive systems for invasive alien species. Emerg Top Life Sci 15 December 2020; 4 (5): 453–462. doi: https://doi.org/10.1042/ETLS20200056
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