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Auteur Romina D. Fernandez |
Documents disponibles écrits par cet auteur (3)
Affiner la rechercheGlobal Impacts Dataset of Invasive Alien Species (GIDIAS) / Sven Bacher in Scientific Data, 12 (2025)
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Titre : Global Impacts Dataset of Invasive Alien Species (GIDIAS) Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Sven Bacher ; Ellen Ryan-Colton ; Mario Coiro ; Phillip Cassey ; Bella S. Galil ; Martin A. Nuñez ; Michael Ansong ; Katharina Dehnen-Schmutz ; Georgi Fayvush ; Romina D. Fernandez ; Ankila J. Hiremath ; Makihiko Ikegami (a) ; Angeliki F. Martinou ; Shana M. McDermott ; Cristina Preda ; Montserrat Vilà ; Olaf L. F. Weyl ; Neelavar Ananthram Aravind ; Ioanna Angelidou ; Katerina Athanasiou ; Vidyadhar Atkore ; Jacob N. Barney ; Tim M. Blackburn ; Eckehard Brocherhoff ; Clinton Carbutt ; Luca Carisio ; Pilar Castro-Diez ; Vanessa Céspedes ; Aikaterini Christopoulou ; Diego F. Cisneros-Heredia ; Meghan Cooling ; Maarten de Groot ; Jakovos Demetriou ; James W. E. Dickey ; Virginia G. Duboscq-Carra ; Regan Early ; Thomas Evans ; Paola T. Flores-Males ; Belinda Gallardo ; Monica Gruber ; Cang Hui ; Jonathan M. Jeschke ; Natalia Z. Joelson ; Mohd Asgar Khan ; Sabrina Kumschick ; Lori Lach ; Katharina Lapin ; Simone Lioy ; Chunlong Liu ; Zoe J. MacMullen ; Manuella A. Mazzitelli ; John Measey ; Agatha Mrugala ; Camille L. Musseau ; Helen F. Nahrung ; Alessia Pepori ; Luis R. Pertierra ; Elisabeth F. Pienaar ; Petr Pyšek ; Gonzalo Rivas Torres ; Henry A. Rojas Martinez ; Julissa Rojas-Sandoval ; Ned L. Ryan-Schofield ; Rocío M. Sánchez ; Alberto Santini ; Davide Santoro ; Riccardo Scalera ; Lisanna Schmidt ; Tinyiko Cavin Shivambu ; Sima Sohrabi ; Elena Tricarico ; Alejandro Trillo ; Pieter van't Hof ; Lara Volery ; Tsungai A. Zengeya Année de publication : 2025 Article en page(s) : 832 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Résumé : Invasive alien species are a major driver of global change, impacting biodiversity, ecosystem services, and human livelihoods. To document these impacts, we present the Global Impacts Dataset of Invasive Alien Species (GIDIAS), a dataset on the positive, negative and neutral impacts of invasive alien species on nature, nature’s contributions to people, and good quality of life. This dataset arises from the Intergovernmental Science-Policy Platform on Biodiversity and Ecosystem Services’ (IPBES) thematic assessment report of this topic. Data were compiled from published sources, including grey literature, reporting a direct observation of an invasive alien species’ impact. All impact records contain up to 52 fields of contextual information and attempt to link impacts to the global standard “environmental impact classification for alien taxa” (EICAT) and “socio-economic impact classification for alien taxa” (SEICAT). GIDIAS includes more than 22000 records of impacts caused by 3353 invasive alien species (plants, vertebrates, invertebrates, microorganisms) from all continents and realms (terrestrial, freshwater, marine), extracted from over 6700 sources. We intend GIDIAS to be a global resource for investigating and managing the variety of impacts of invasive alien species across taxa and regions. Identifiant : DOI : 10.1038/s41597-025-05184-5 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=155621
in Scientific Data > 12 (2025) . - 832Bacher, Sven, Ryan-Colton, Ellen, Coiro, Mario, Cassey, Phillip, Galil, Bella S., Nuñez, Martin A., Ansong, Michael, Dehnen-Schmutz, Katharina, Fayvush, Georgi, Fernandez, Romina D., Hiremath, Ankila J., Ikegami, Makihiko (a), Martinou, Angeliki F., McDermott, Shana M., Preda, Cristina, Vilà, Montserrat, Weyl, Olaf L. F., Ananthram Aravind, Neelavar, Angelidou, Ioanna, Athanasiou, Katerina, Atkore, Vidyadhar, Barney, Jacob N., Blackburn, Tim M., Brocherhoff, Eckehard, Carbutt, Clinton, Carisio, Luca, Castro-Diez, Pilar, Céspedes, Vanessa, Christopoulou, Aikaterini, Cisneros-Heredia, Diego F., Cooling, Meghan, Groot, Maarten de, Demetriou, Jakovos, Dickey, James W. E., Duboscq-Carra, Virginia G., Early, Regan, Evans, Thomas, Flores-Males, Paola T., Gallardo, Belinda, Gruber, Monica, Hui, Cang, Jeschke, Jonathan M., Joelson, Natalia Z., Asgar Khan, Mohd, Kumschick, Sabrina, Lach, Lori, Lapin, Katharina, Lioy, Simone, Liu, Chunlong, MacMullen, Zoe J., Mazzitelli, Manuella A., Measey, John, Mrugala, Agatha, Musseau, Camille L., Nahrung, Helen F., Pepori, Alessia, Pertierra, Luis R., Pienaar, Elisabeth F., Pyšek, Petr, Rivas Torres, Gonzalo, Rojas Martinez, Henry A., Rojas-Sandoval, Julissa, Ryan-Schofield, Ned L., Sánchez, Rocío M., Santini, Alberto, Santoro, Davide, Scalera, Riccardo, Schmidt, Lisanna, Cavin Shivambu, Tinyiko, Sohrabi, Sima, Tricarico, Elena, Trillo, Alejandro, Hof, Pieter van't, Volery, Lara, Zengeya, Tsungai A. 2025 Global Impacts Dataset of Invasive Alien Species (GIDIAS). Scientific Data, 12: 832.Documents numériques
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article (2025)Adobe Acrobat PDFA Global Review of Ligustrum Lucidum (OLEACEAE) Invasion / Romina D. Fernandez in Botanical Review, 86 (2020)
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Titre : A Global Review of Ligustrum Lucidum (OLEACEAE) Invasion Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Romina D. Fernandez ; Sergio J. Ceballos ; Roxana Aragón ; Agustina Malizia ; Lía Montti ; Juan I. Whitworth-Hulse ; Pilar Castro-Diez ; H. Ricardo Grau Année de publication : 2020 Article en page(s) : 93-118 Langues : Français (fre) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Mots-clés : Ligustrum lucidum W.T.Aiton, 1810 Résumé : Ligustrum lucidum is a highly invasive East Asian tree that successfully colonizes several subtropical and temperate areas around the world. Its invasion capacity results from a widespread human use mostly in urban and periurban settings, very abundant fruit and seed production, small bird-dispersed fruits, high germination rates, resprouting capacity, fast growth rates, low herbivory levels and tolerance to a wide range of light, temperature and soil. All these traits contribute to its ability to rapidly increase in abundance, alter biodiversity, landscape ecology and limit its management. This paper reviews the current knowledge on L. lucidum with particular focus on its uses, distribution, invasiveness, ecological and economic impacts and control measures. Most relevant aspect of the review highlight the negative ecological impacts of L. lucidum, its potential to continue expanding its range of distribution and the need of further studies on the eco-physiology of the species, economic impact and social perception of its invasion and early warning systems. Identifiant : DOI : 10.1007/s12229-020-09228-w Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=147845
in Botanical Review > 86 (2020) . - 93-118Fernandez, Romina D., Ceballos, Sergio J., Aragón, Roxana, Malizia, Agustina, Montti, Lía, Whitworth-Hulse, Juan I., Castro-Diez, Pilar, Ricardo Grau, H. 2020 A Global Review of Ligustrum Lucidum (OLEACEAE) Invasion. Botanical Review, 86: 93-118.Documents numériques
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Article (2020)URLTaming the terminological tempest in invasion science / Ismael Soto in Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 99 (4) (2024)
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Titre : Taming the terminological tempest in invasion science Type de document : Imprimé Auteurs : Ismael Soto ; Paride Balzani ; Laís Carneiro ; Ross N. Cuthbert ; Rafael L. Macedo ; Ali Serhan Tarkan ; Danish A. Ahmed ; Alok Bang ; Karolina Barcela-Spychalska ; Sarah A. Bailey ; Thomas Baudry ; Liliana Ballesteros-Mejia ; Alejandro Bortolus ; Elizabeta Briski ; J. Robert Britton ; Milos Buric ; Morelia Camacho-Cervantes ; Carlos Cano-Barbacil ; Denis Copilas-Ciocianu ; Neil E. Coughlan ; Pierre Courtois ; Zoltán Csabai ; Tatenda Dalu ; Vanessa De Santis ; James W. E. Dickey ; Romina D. Dimarco ; Jannike Falk-Andersson ; Romina D. Fernandez ; Margarita Florencio ; Ana Clara S. Franco ; Emili García-Berthou ; Daniela Giannetto ; Milka M. Glavendekic ; Michał Grabowski ; Gustavo Heringer ; Ileana Herrera ; Wei Huang ; Katie L. Kamelamela ; Natalia Kirichenko ; Antonin Kouba ; Melina Kourantidou ; Irmak Kurtul ; Gabriel Laufer ; Boris Lipták ; Chunlong Liu ; Eugenia López-López ; Vanessa Lozano ; Stefano Mammola ; Agnese Marchini ; Valentina Meshkova ; Marco Milardi ; Dmitri L. Musolin ; Martin A. Nuñez ; Francisco J. Oficialdegui ; Jiri Patoka ; Zarah Pattison ; Daniel Pincheira-Donoso ; Marina Piria ; Anna F. Probert ; Jess Jessen Rasmussen ; David Renault ; Filipe Ribeiro ; Gil Rilov ; Tamara B. Robinson ; Axel E. Sanchez ; Evangelina Schwindt ; Josie South ; Peter Stoett ; Hugo Verreycken ; Lorenzo Vilizzi ; Yong-Jian Wang ; Yuya Watari ; Priscilla M. Wehi ; András Weiperth ; Peter Wiberg-Larsen ; Sercan Yapici ; Baran Yogurtçuoglu ; Rafael D. Zenni ; Bella S. Galil ; Jamie T. A. Dick ; James C. Russell ; Anthony Ricciardi (1965-) ; Daniel Simberloff (1942-) ; Corey J. A. Bradshaw ; Phillip J. Haubrock Année de publication : 2024 Article en page(s) : 1357-1390 Langues : Anglais (eng) Catégories : [CBNPMP-Thématique] Plantes subspontanées, naturalisées, envahissantes Résumé : Standardised terminology in science is important for clarity of interpretation and communication. In invasion science – a dynamic and rapidly evolving discipline – the proliferation of technical terminology has lacked a standardised framework for its development. The result is a convoluted and inconsistent usage of terminology, with various discrepancies in descriptions of damage and interventions. A standardised framework is therefore needed for a clear, universally applicable, and consistent terminology to promote more effective communication across researchers, stakeholders, and policymakers. Inconsistencies in terminology stem from the exponential increase in scientific publications on the patterns and processes of biological invasions authored by experts from various disciplines and countries since the 1990s, as well as publications by legislators and policymakers focusing on practical applications, regulations, and management of resources. Aligning and standardising terminology across stakeholders remains a challenge in invasion science. Here, we review and evaluate the multiple terms used in invasion science (e.g. ‘non-native’, ‘alien’, ‘invasive’ or ‘invader’, ‘exotic’, ‘non-indigenous’, ‘naturalised’, ‘pest’) to propose a more simplified and standardised terminology. The streamlined framework we propose and translate into 28 other languages is based on the terms (i) ‘non-native’, denoting species transported beyond their natural biogeographic range, (ii) ‘established non-native’, i.e. those non-native species that have established self-sustaining populations in their new location(s) in the wild, and (iii) ‘invasive non-native’ – populations of established non-native species that have recently spread or are spreading rapidly in their invaded range actively or passively with or without human mediation. We also highlight the importance of conceptualising ‘spread’ for classifying invasiveness and ‘impact’ for management. Finally, we propose a protocol for classifying populations based on (i) dispersal mechanism, (ii) species origin, (iii) population status, and (iv) impact. Collectively and without introducing new terminology, the framework that we present aims to facilitate effective communication and collaboration in invasion science and management of non-native species. Identifiant : DOI : 10.1111/brv.13071 Permalink : https://biblio.cbnpmp.fr/index.php?lvl=notice_display&id=154518
in Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society > 99 (4) (2024) . - 1357-1390Soto, Ismael, Balzani, Paride, Carneiro, Laís, Cuthbert, Ross N., Macedo, Rafael L., Tarkan, Ali Serhan, Ahmed, Danish A., Bang, Alok, Barcela-Spychalska, Karolina, Bailey, Sarah A., Baudry, Thomas, Ballesteros-Mejia, Liliana, Bortolus, Alejandro, Briski, Elizabeta, Britton, J. Robert, Buric, Milos, Camacho-Cervantes, Morelia, Cano-Barbacil, Carlos, Copilas-Ciocianu, Denis, Coughlan, Neil E., Courtois, Pierre, Csabai, Zoltán, Dalu, Tatenda, De Santis, Vanessa, Dickey, James W. E., Dimarco, Romina D., Falk-Andersson, Jannike, Fernandez, Romina D., Florencio, Margarita, Franco, Ana Clara S., García-Berthou, Emili, Giannetto, Daniela, Glavendekic, Milka M., Grabowski, Michał, Heringer, Gustavo, Herrera, Ileana, Huang, Wei, Kamelamela, Katie L., Kirichenko, Natalia, Kouba, Antonin, Kourantidou, Melina, Kurtul, Irmak, Laufer, Gabriel, Lipták, Boris, Liu, Chunlong, López-López, Eugenia, Lozano, Vanessa, Mammola, Stefano, Marchini, Agnese, Meshkova, Valentina, Milardi, Marco, Musolin, Dmitri L., Nuñez, Martin A., Oficialdegui, Francisco J., Patoka, Jiri, Pattison, Zarah, Pincheira-Donoso, Daniel, Piria, Marina, Probert, Anna F., Rasmussen, Jess Jessen, Renault, David, Ribeiro, Filipe, Rilov, Gil, Robinson, Tamara B., Sanchez, Axel E., Schwindt, Evangelina, South, Josie, Stoett, Peter, Verreycken, Hugo, Vilizzi, Lorenzo, Wang, Yong-Jian, Watari, Yuya, Wehi, Priscilla M., Weiperth, András, Wiberg-Larsen, Peter, Yapici, Sercan, Yogurtçuoglu, Baran, Zenni, Rafael D., Galil, Bella S., Dick, Jamie T. A., Russell, James C., Ricciardi, Anthony (1965-), Simberloff, Daniel (1942-), Bradshaw, Corey J. A., Haubrock, Phillip J. 2024 Taming the terminological tempest in invasion science. Biological reviews of the Cambridge Philosophical Society, 99(4): 1357-1390.Documents numériques
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Article (2024)URL




