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Introducing the World Register of Introduced Marine Species (WRiMS)
Costello, M.J.; Dekeyzer, S.; Galil, B.; Hutchings, P.; Katsanevakis, S.; Pagad, S.; Robinson, T.; Turon, X.; Vandepitte, L.; Vanhoorne, B.; Verfaille, K.; Willan, R.; Rius, M. (2021). Introducing the World Register of Introduced Marine Species (WRiMS). Manag. Biol. Inv. 12(4): 792-811. https://dx.doi.org/10.3391/mbi.2021.12.4.02
In: Management of Biological Invasions. Regional Euro-Asian Biological Invasions Centre (REABIC): Helsinki. e-ISSN 1989-8649
Peer reviewed article  

Available in  Authors 
    Vlaams Instituut voor de Zee: Open access 369179 [ download pdf ]

Author keywords
    invasive, alien, naturalised, non-indigenous, ocean, biodiversity informatics

Authors  Top 
  • Costello, M.J.
  • Dekeyzer, S.
  • Galil, B.
  • Hutchings, P.
  • Katsanevakis, S.
  • Pagad, S.
  • Robinson, T.
  • Turon, X.
  • Vandepitte, L.
  • Vanhoorne, B.
  • Verfaille, K.
  • Willan, R.
  • Rius, M.

Abstract
    A major historical challenge for the management of anthropogenic introductions of species has been the absence of a globally standardised system for species nomenclature. For over a decade, the World Register of Marine Species (WoRMS) has provided a taxonomically authoritative classification and designation of thecurrently accepted names for all known marine species. However, WoRMS mainly focuses on taxonomy and does not specifically address species introductions. Here, we introduce the World Register of Introduced Marine Species (WRiMS), a database directly linked to WoRMS that includes all introduced marine species, distinguishing native and introduced geographic ranges. Both the WoRMS andWRiMS contents are continually updated by specialists who add citations of original species descriptions, key taxonomic literature, images and notes on native and introduced geographic distributions. WRiMS editors take responsibility for assessing the validity of species records by critically evaluating if a species has been introduced to a region, erroneously identified and/or potentially naturally present in a region but previously unnoticed. WRiMS currently contains 2,714 introduced species. The amount and quality of the information entered depend onthe availability of experts to update its contents. Because WRiMS is global and it combines species taxonomic and geographic information with links to other resources and expertise, it is currently the most comprehensive standardised database of marine introduced species. In addition, WRiMS forms the basis for afuture global early warning system of marine species introductions.

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