• Marine Data BC
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Quantifying potential propagule pressure of aquatic invasive species from the commercial shipping industry in Canada

We quantify and compare different measures of potential propagule pressure (PPP) of aquatic invasive species (AIS) from commercial vessels in Canada. We used ship arrivals and ballast water discharge volumes as proxies for PPP from ballast water organisms, and wetted surface area (WSA) as a proxy for hull fouling PPP, to determine their relative contributions to total PPP. Our study illustrates benefits and limitations of using different PPP proxies to estimate invasion risk.

Simple

Date (Publication)
2012
Cited responsible party
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

DFO

Colin Levings

Principal investigator

Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainabiltiy at UBC

V. Lo

Principal investigator

Institute for Resources, Environment and Sustainability

K.M.A. Chan

Principal investigator
Presentation form
Digital document
Other citation details

Marine Pollution Bulletin 64 (2012) 295–302 journal homepage: www.elsevier.com/locate/marpolbul doi:10.1016/j.marpolbul.2011.11.016 Abbreviations: AIS, aquatic invasive species; PPP, potential propagule pressure; FT, flow-through exchange; MOE, mid-ocean exchange; SWF, saltwater flushing.

Purpose

In our study we quantified the PPP of AIS from shipping activities to all major Canadian shipping ports in the Atlantic, Great Lakes-St. Lawrence, and Pacific shipping regions. To our knowledge, this is the first such comprehensive analysis of propagule pressure on a national scale (but see DiBacco et al. (2011) for an analysis of ballast water zooplankton densities for vessels transiting Port Metro Vancouver and several East coast ports).

Status
Completed
Maintenance and update frequency
Not planned

Government of Canada Core Subject Thesaurus

  • Invasive species

Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords v15.9

  • Earth Science > Biosphere

  • Earth Science > Biosphere > Ecological Dynamics > Community Dynamics > Invasive Species

DFO Areas

  • North Pacific Ocean > Fraser River and BC Interior

  • North Pacific Ocean > South Inner Coast(Johnstone Strait, Strait of Georgia, Juan de Fuca, inlets and passages)

DFO Areas

  • North Pacific Ocean > Fraser River and BC Interior

  • North Pacific Ocean > South Inner Coast(Johnstone Strait, Strait of Georgia, Juan de Fuca, inlets and passages)

Use limitation

Copyright 2011 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

Language

English

Character set
UTF8
Topic category
  • Oceans
Environment description

14 KB

Description

Data were grouped according to three major shipping regions in Canada: the Atlantic coast, GLSL and Pacific coast. Ports east of Quebec City were classified as Atlantic ports, as the limit of saltwater intrusion is usually at Quebec City or at Île D’Orléans, just west of Quebec City (Gobeil, 2006). In the Pacific region, Port Metro Vancouver sub-ports and regions (Fraser Port, Vancouver Port-Burrard Inlet, Roberts Bank, Port Moody) were treated separately in our analysis as they are geographically distinct and ballast water data were available for each sub-port.

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Begin
2008
End
2012
Supplemental Information

We quantify and compare different measures of potential propagule pressure (PPP) of aquatic invasive species (AIS) from commercial vessels in Canada. We used ship arrivals and ballast water discharge volumes as proxies for PPP from ballast water organisms, and wetted surface area (WSA) as a proxy for hull fouling PPP, to determine their relative contributions to total PPP. For three regions studied, PPP proxies correlated significantly across ports and some vessel categories. Relative contributions of ship arrivals, ballast discharge, and WSAs to PPP, evidenced by non-significant correlations across these measures, varied across regions, ports, vessel types, and seasons. Flow-through (dominant on east and west coasts) and empty-refill (in Great Lakes-St. Lawrence region) were the major ballast water exchange methods employed by the vessels surveyed. These methods have different biological efficacy for AIS removal, influencing PPP. Our study illustrates benefits and limitations of using different PPP proxies to estimate invasion risk.

Distribution format
Name Version

electronic

none

Distributor contact
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

Pacific Salmon Foundation

Isobel Pearsall

pearsalli@shaw.ca

Distributor
OnLine resource
Protocol Linkage Name

WWW:LINK-1.0-http--link

https://www.dfo-mpo.gc.ca/science/data-donnees/index-eng.html

DFO Science website

WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download

https://soggy2.zoology.ubc.ca/geonetwork/srv/api/records/ed093058-8b39-4137-857a-6cf74b421abe/attachments/ed093058-8b39-4137-857a-6cf74b421abe.pdf ed093058-8b39-4137-857a-6cf74b421abe.pdf

WWW:DOWNLOAD-1.0-http--download

https://soggy2.zoology.ubc.ca/geonetwork/srv/api/records/ed093058-8b39-4137-857a-6cf74b421abe/attachments/ed093058-8b39-4137-857a-6cf74b421abe.xlsx ed093058-8b39-4137-857a-6cf74b421abe.xlsx
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Statement

Levings produced paper copy. Fraser scanned with Fujitsu Scansnap s1500 (ABBY Finereader OCR software). Data was extracted through Adobe Reader conversion and manual entry into MS Excel.

Metadata

File identifier
ed093058-8b39-4137-857a-6cf74b421abe XML
Metadata language

eng

Character set
UTF8
Hierarchy level
Dataset
Date stamp
2023-12-19T00:17:32.075Z
Metadata standard name

North American Profile of ISO19115:2003 - Geographic information - Metadata

Metadata standard version

NAP - CAN/CGSB-171.100-2009

Metadata author
Organisation name Individual name Electronic mail address Role

Pacific Salmon Foundation

Sarah Fraser

fraser.sarahk@gmail.com

Author
Other language
Language Character encoding
French UTF8
English UTF8
 
 

Overviews

overview
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Spatial extent

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Keywords

Global Change Master Directory (GCMD) Science Keywords v15.9
Earth Science > Biosphere Earth Science > Biosphere > Ecological Dynamics > Community Dynamics > Invasive Species
Government of Canada Core Subject Thesaurus
Invasive species

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