ID | ||
Preferred Name |
Major |
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Synonyms |
MR |
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Definitions |
A species is considered to have major impacts when it causes the local or population extinction of at least one native species, and leads to reversible changes in the structure of communities and the abiotic or biotic composition of ecosystems. |
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In Schemes | ||
Type |
http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#Concept |
altLabel | MR |
definition | A species is considered to have major impacts when it causes the local or population extinction of at least one native species, and leads to reversible changes in the structure of communities and the abiotic or biotic composition of ecosystems. |
note | Blackburn T.M., F. Essl, T. Evans, P.E. Hulme, J.M. Jeschke, I. Kühn, S. Kumschick, Z. Markova, A. Mrugała, W. Nentwig, J. Pergl, P. Pyšek, W. Rabitsch, A. Ricciardi, D.M. Richardson, A. Sendek, M. Vila, J.R.U. Wilson, M. Winter, P. Genovesi, S. Bacher. 2014. A Unified Classification of Alien Species Based on the Magnitude of their Environmental Impacts. PLOS Biology, 12:5, e1001850. |
prefLabel | Major |
created | 2015-03-20 19:20:14 |
broader | |
modified | 2020-04-21T15:05:46.604000+00:00 |
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