ID | ||
Preferred Name |
Minor |
|
Synonyms |
MI |
|
Definitions |
A species is considered to have minor impacts when it causes reductions in the fitness of individuals in the native biota, but no declines in native population densities. |
|
In Schemes | ||
Type |
http://www.w3.org/2004/02/skos/core#Concept |
altLabel | MI |
definition | A species is considered to have minor impacts when it causes reductions in the fitness of individuals in the native biota, but no declines in native population densities. |
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 | Minor |
created | 2015-03-20 19:20:14 |
broader | |
modified | 2020-04-21T15:10:04.598000+00:00 |
Delete | Subject | Subject Sort | Archive Sort | Author | Type | Created | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
No notes to display |