Ontology type: schema:ScholarlyArticle
2008-12-12
AUTHORSJérôme N. Petit, Mark S. Hoddle, Julie Grandgirard, George K. Roderick, Neil Davies
ABSTRACTInvasive species are generally detected in new ecosystems long after their first arrival, making it difficult to elucidate pathways leading to successful invasion. In this study, the dispersal of a classical biological control agent, the mymarid egg parasitoid Gonatocerus ashmeadi, was monitored across ten islands in three major island groups in French Polynesia from the exact moment of its introduction into Tahiti to combat the invasive pest Homalodiscavitripennis. Within 10 months, the parasitoid spread quickly from Tahiti to widely separated islands (up to 1,400 km from Tahiti); presumably through the transportation of plant material containing parasitized H. vitripennis eggs. Gonatocerus ashmeadi thus functioned as a “biomarker”, providing an informal audit of the effectiveness of inter-island quarantine measures designed to curb the accidental spread of noxious organisms. Survey results suggest that invasive organisms, like deliberately released biological control agents, can be unintentionally and rapidly transmitted across vast distances by humans. Furthermore, even remote islands appear to experience relentless pressure from invasive propagules associated with human travel. Implications of survey work documenting the spread and impact of G. ashmeadi are discussed within the context of biological control programs, non-target impacts, and biosecurity initiatives. More... »
PAGES485-495
http://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7
DOIhttp://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7
DIMENSIONShttps://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1009234092
JSON-LD is the canonical representation for SciGraph data.
TIP: You can open this SciGraph record using an external JSON-LD service: JSON-LD Playground Google SDTT
[
{
"@context": "https://springernature.github.io/scigraph/jsonld/sgcontext.json",
"about": [
{
"id": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/06",
"inDefinedTermSet": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/",
"name": "Biological Sciences",
"type": "DefinedTerm"
},
{
"id": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/0602",
"inDefinedTermSet": "http://purl.org/au-research/vocabulary/anzsrc-for/2008/",
"name": "Ecology",
"type": "DefinedTerm"
}
],
"author": [
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Richard B. Gump South Pacific Research Station, University of California, Berkeley, BP 244, 98728, Moorea, French Polynesia",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.508595.4",
"name": [
"Richard B. Gump South Pacific Research Station, University of California, Berkeley, BP 244, 98728, Moorea, French Polynesia"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Petit",
"givenName": "J\u00e9r\u00f4me N.",
"id": "sg:person.015057074011.82",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.015057074011.82"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Center for Invasion Biology, University of California, 92521, Riverside, CA, USA",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.266097.c",
"name": [
"Department of Entomology, University of California, 92521, Riverside, CA, USA",
"Center for Invasion Biology, University of California, 92521, Riverside, CA, USA"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Hoddle",
"givenName": "Mark S.",
"id": "sg:person.01236235275.65",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01236235275.65"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Richard B. Gump South Pacific Research Station, University of California, Berkeley, BP 244, 98728, Moorea, French Polynesia",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.508595.4",
"name": [
"Richard B. Gump South Pacific Research Station, University of California, Berkeley, BP 244, 98728, Moorea, French Polynesia"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Grandgirard",
"givenName": "Julie",
"id": "sg:person.012114307644.44",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.012114307644.44"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Environmental Science, Policy and Management, Division of Insect Biology, University of California, 94720, Berkeley, CA, USA",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.47840.3f",
"name": [
"Environmental Science, Policy and Management, Division of Insect Biology, University of California, 94720, Berkeley, CA, USA"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Roderick",
"givenName": "George K.",
"id": "sg:person.01077676271.09",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01077676271.09"
],
"type": "Person"
},
{
"affiliation": {
"alternateName": "Richard B. Gump South Pacific Research Station, University of California, Berkeley, BP 244, 98728, Moorea, French Polynesia",
"id": "http://www.grid.ac/institutes/grid.508595.4",
"name": [
"Richard B. Gump South Pacific Research Station, University of California, Berkeley, BP 244, 98728, Moorea, French Polynesia"
],
"type": "Organization"
},
"familyName": "Davies",
"givenName": "Neil",
"id": "sg:person.01137600007.12",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01137600007.12"
],
"type": "Person"
}
],
"citation": [
{
"id": "sg:pub.10.1007/s10530-007-9116-y",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1016155102",
"https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-007-9116-y"
],
"type": "CreativeWork"
},
{
"id": "sg:pub.10.1007/s10530-007-9172-3",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1047327526",
"https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-007-9172-3"
],
"type": "CreativeWork"
},
{
"id": "sg:pub.10.1007/978-1-4899-7214-9",
"sameAs": [
"https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1051217815",
"https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-7214-9"
],
"type": "CreativeWork"
}
],
"datePublished": "2008-12-12",
"datePublishedReg": "2008-12-12",
"description": "Invasive species are generally detected in new ecosystems long after their first arrival, making it difficult to elucidate pathways leading to successful invasion. In this study, the dispersal of a classical biological control agent, the mymarid egg parasitoid Gonatocerus ashmeadi, was monitored across ten islands in three major island groups in French Polynesia from the exact moment of its introduction into Tahiti to combat the invasive pest Homalodiscavitripennis. Within 10\u00a0months, the parasitoid spread quickly from Tahiti to widely separated islands (up to 1,400\u00a0km from Tahiti); presumably through the transportation of plant material containing parasitized H. vitripennis eggs. Gonatocerus ashmeadi thus functioned as a \u201cbiomarker\u201d, providing an informal audit of the effectiveness of inter-island quarantine measures designed to curb the accidental spread of noxious organisms. Survey results suggest that invasive organisms, like deliberately released biological control agents, can be unintentionally and rapidly transmitted across vast distances by humans. Furthermore, even remote islands appear to experience relentless pressure from invasive propagules associated with human travel. Implications of survey work documenting the spread and impact of G. ashmeadi are discussed within the context of biological control programs, non-target impacts, and biosecurity initiatives.",
"genre": "article",
"id": "sg:pub.10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7",
"inLanguage": "en",
"isAccessibleForFree": false,
"isPartOf": [
{
"id": "sg:journal.1371641",
"issn": [
"1386-6141",
"0013-8959"
],
"name": "BioControl",
"publisher": "Springer Nature",
"type": "Periodical"
},
{
"issueNumber": "4",
"type": "PublicationIssue"
},
{
"type": "PublicationVolume",
"volumeNumber": "54"
}
],
"keywords": [
"biological control agents",
"Gonatocerus ashmeadi",
"control agents",
"classical biological control agent",
"biological control programs",
"French Polynesia",
"non-target impacts",
"noxious organisms",
"successful invasion",
"invasive species",
"biocontrol agents",
"invasive propagules",
"invasion pathways",
"invasive organisms",
"vitripennis eggs",
"island groups",
"major island groups",
"biosecurity initiatives",
"successful spread",
"ashmeadi",
"plant material",
"accidental spread",
"new ecosystem",
"biosecurity failures",
"organisms",
"remote islands",
"pathway",
"Polynesia",
"islands",
"vast distances",
"dispersal",
"propagules",
"parasitoids",
"quarantine measures",
"species",
"ecosystems",
"Tahiti",
"survey work",
"eggs",
"human travel",
"invasion",
"control programs",
"spread",
"humans",
"impact",
"agents",
"biomarkers",
"relentless pressure",
"survey results",
"first arrivals",
"distance",
"implications",
"study",
"initiatives",
"introduction",
"results",
"measures",
"arrival",
"group",
"transportation",
"context",
"program",
"pressure",
"work",
"exact moment",
"effectiveness",
"materials",
"months",
"failure",
"travel",
"audit",
"moment"
],
"name": "Successful spread of a biocontrol agent reveals a biosecurity failure: elucidating long distance invasion pathways for Gonatocerus ashmeadi in French Polynesia",
"pagination": "485-495",
"productId": [
{
"name": "dimensions_id",
"type": "PropertyValue",
"value": [
"pub.1009234092"
]
},
{
"name": "doi",
"type": "PropertyValue",
"value": [
"10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7"
]
}
],
"sameAs": [
"https://doi.org/10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7",
"https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1009234092"
],
"sdDataset": "articles",
"sdDatePublished": "2022-05-20T07:25",
"sdLicense": "https://scigraph.springernature.com/explorer/license/",
"sdPublisher": {
"name": "Springer Nature - SN SciGraph project",
"type": "Organization"
},
"sdSource": "s3://com-springernature-scigraph/baseset/20220519/entities/gbq_results/article/article_473.jsonl",
"type": "ScholarlyArticle",
"url": "https://doi.org/10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7"
}
]
Download the RDF metadata as: json-ld nt turtle xml License info
JSON-LD is a popular format for linked data which is fully compatible with JSON.
curl -H 'Accept: application/ld+json' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7'
N-Triples is a line-based linked data format ideal for batch operations.
curl -H 'Accept: application/n-triples' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7'
Turtle is a human-readable linked data format.
curl -H 'Accept: text/turtle' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7'
RDF/XML is a standard XML format for linked data.
curl -H 'Accept: application/rdf+xml' 'https://scigraph.springernature.com/pub.10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7'
This table displays all metadata directly associated to this object as RDF triples.
177 TRIPLES
22 PREDICATES
100 URIs
89 LITERALS
6 BLANK NODES
Subject | Predicate | Object | |
---|---|---|---|
1 | sg:pub.10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7 | schema:about | anzsrc-for:06 |
2 | ″ | ″ | anzsrc-for:0602 |
3 | ″ | schema:author | N983799fc6438436bafb1fa3c34f3bca1 |
4 | ″ | schema:citation | sg:pub.10.1007/978-1-4899-7214-9 |
5 | ″ | ″ | sg:pub.10.1007/s10530-007-9116-y |
6 | ″ | ″ | sg:pub.10.1007/s10530-007-9172-3 |
7 | ″ | schema:datePublished | 2008-12-12 |
8 | ″ | schema:datePublishedReg | 2008-12-12 |
9 | ″ | schema:description | Invasive species are generally detected in new ecosystems long after their first arrival, making it difficult to elucidate pathways leading to successful invasion. In this study, the dispersal of a classical biological control agent, the mymarid egg parasitoid Gonatocerus ashmeadi, was monitored across ten islands in three major island groups in French Polynesia from the exact moment of its introduction into Tahiti to combat the invasive pest Homalodiscavitripennis. Within 10 months, the parasitoid spread quickly from Tahiti to widely separated islands (up to 1,400 km from Tahiti); presumably through the transportation of plant material containing parasitized H. vitripennis eggs. Gonatocerus ashmeadi thus functioned as a “biomarker”, providing an informal audit of the effectiveness of inter-island quarantine measures designed to curb the accidental spread of noxious organisms. Survey results suggest that invasive organisms, like deliberately released biological control agents, can be unintentionally and rapidly transmitted across vast distances by humans. Furthermore, even remote islands appear to experience relentless pressure from invasive propagules associated with human travel. Implications of survey work documenting the spread and impact of G. ashmeadi are discussed within the context of biological control programs, non-target impacts, and biosecurity initiatives. |
10 | ″ | schema:genre | article |
11 | ″ | schema:inLanguage | en |
12 | ″ | schema:isAccessibleForFree | false |
13 | ″ | schema:isPartOf | N0bc5fb0202554f9bb22428acf61cb137 |
14 | ″ | ″ | N6cf61fba2c1d412f8f500e6de0d0759f |
15 | ″ | ″ | sg:journal.1371641 |
16 | ″ | schema:keywords | French Polynesia |
17 | ″ | ″ | Gonatocerus ashmeadi |
18 | ″ | ″ | Polynesia |
19 | ″ | ″ | Tahiti |
20 | ″ | ″ | accidental spread |
21 | ″ | ″ | agents |
22 | ″ | ″ | arrival |
23 | ″ | ″ | ashmeadi |
24 | ″ | ″ | audit |
25 | ″ | ″ | biocontrol agents |
26 | ″ | ″ | biological control agents |
27 | ″ | ″ | biological control programs |
28 | ″ | ″ | biomarkers |
29 | ″ | ″ | biosecurity failures |
30 | ″ | ″ | biosecurity initiatives |
31 | ″ | ″ | classical biological control agent |
32 | ″ | ″ | context |
33 | ″ | ″ | control agents |
34 | ″ | ″ | control programs |
35 | ″ | ″ | dispersal |
36 | ″ | ″ | distance |
37 | ″ | ″ | ecosystems |
38 | ″ | ″ | effectiveness |
39 | ″ | ″ | eggs |
40 | ″ | ″ | exact moment |
41 | ″ | ″ | failure |
42 | ″ | ″ | first arrivals |
43 | ″ | ″ | group |
44 | ″ | ″ | human travel |
45 | ″ | ″ | humans |
46 | ″ | ″ | impact |
47 | ″ | ″ | implications |
48 | ″ | ″ | initiatives |
49 | ″ | ″ | introduction |
50 | ″ | ″ | invasion |
51 | ″ | ″ | invasion pathways |
52 | ″ | ″ | invasive organisms |
53 | ″ | ″ | invasive propagules |
54 | ″ | ″ | invasive species |
55 | ″ | ″ | island groups |
56 | ″ | ″ | islands |
57 | ″ | ″ | major island groups |
58 | ″ | ″ | materials |
59 | ″ | ″ | measures |
60 | ″ | ″ | moment |
61 | ″ | ″ | months |
62 | ″ | ″ | new ecosystem |
63 | ″ | ″ | non-target impacts |
64 | ″ | ″ | noxious organisms |
65 | ″ | ″ | organisms |
66 | ″ | ″ | parasitoids |
67 | ″ | ″ | pathway |
68 | ″ | ″ | plant material |
69 | ″ | ″ | pressure |
70 | ″ | ″ | program |
71 | ″ | ″ | propagules |
72 | ″ | ″ | quarantine measures |
73 | ″ | ″ | relentless pressure |
74 | ″ | ″ | remote islands |
75 | ″ | ″ | results |
76 | ″ | ″ | species |
77 | ″ | ″ | spread |
78 | ″ | ″ | study |
79 | ″ | ″ | successful invasion |
80 | ″ | ″ | successful spread |
81 | ″ | ″ | survey results |
82 | ″ | ″ | survey work |
83 | ″ | ″ | transportation |
84 | ″ | ″ | travel |
85 | ″ | ″ | vast distances |
86 | ″ | ″ | vitripennis eggs |
87 | ″ | ″ | work |
88 | ″ | schema:name | Successful spread of a biocontrol agent reveals a biosecurity failure: elucidating long distance invasion pathways for Gonatocerus ashmeadi in French Polynesia |
89 | ″ | schema:pagination | 485-495 |
90 | ″ | schema:productId | N41f311a710d7422486018227a0050415 |
91 | ″ | ″ | N9a3ee5aad9324a51a9dab91f804f6e06 |
92 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1009234092 |
93 | ″ | ″ | https://doi.org/10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7 |
94 | ″ | schema:sdDatePublished | 2022-05-20T07:25 |
95 | ″ | schema:sdLicense | https://scigraph.springernature.com/explorer/license/ |
96 | ″ | schema:sdPublisher | N06fbddd39f42459ea545db49c6b14f12 |
97 | ″ | schema:url | https://doi.org/10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7 |
98 | ″ | sgo:license | sg:explorer/license/ |
99 | ″ | sgo:sdDataset | articles |
100 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:ScholarlyArticle |
101 | N01e59f3a206548c89883643903619efb | rdf:first | sg:person.01137600007.12 |
102 | ″ | rdf:rest | rdf:nil |
103 | N06fbddd39f42459ea545db49c6b14f12 | schema:name | Springer Nature - SN SciGraph project |
104 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |
105 | N0bc5fb0202554f9bb22428acf61cb137 | schema:volumeNumber | 54 |
106 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PublicationVolume |
107 | N41f311a710d7422486018227a0050415 | schema:name | dimensions_id |
108 | ″ | schema:value | pub.1009234092 |
109 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PropertyValue |
110 | N6cf61fba2c1d412f8f500e6de0d0759f | schema:issueNumber | 4 |
111 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PublicationIssue |
112 | N72aa454f939042e4a000fa6dcd7d42c9 | rdf:first | sg:person.01077676271.09 |
113 | ″ | rdf:rest | N01e59f3a206548c89883643903619efb |
114 | N88598ee3bc934e29bb53e12dae1a303e | rdf:first | sg:person.01236235275.65 |
115 | ″ | rdf:rest | N94c13b79f72d4cfb8525c08e5f182e16 |
116 | N94c13b79f72d4cfb8525c08e5f182e16 | rdf:first | sg:person.012114307644.44 |
117 | ″ | rdf:rest | N72aa454f939042e4a000fa6dcd7d42c9 |
118 | N983799fc6438436bafb1fa3c34f3bca1 | rdf:first | sg:person.015057074011.82 |
119 | ″ | rdf:rest | N88598ee3bc934e29bb53e12dae1a303e |
120 | N9a3ee5aad9324a51a9dab91f804f6e06 | schema:name | doi |
121 | ″ | schema:value | 10.1007/s10526-008-9204-7 |
122 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:PropertyValue |
123 | anzsrc-for:06 | schema:inDefinedTermSet | anzsrc-for: |
124 | ″ | schema:name | Biological Sciences |
125 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:DefinedTerm |
126 | anzsrc-for:0602 | schema:inDefinedTermSet | anzsrc-for: |
127 | ″ | schema:name | Ecology |
128 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:DefinedTerm |
129 | sg:journal.1371641 | schema:issn | 0013-8959 |
130 | ″ | ″ | 1386-6141 |
131 | ″ | schema:name | BioControl |
132 | ″ | schema:publisher | Springer Nature |
133 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Periodical |
134 | sg:person.01077676271.09 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.47840.3f |
135 | ″ | schema:familyName | Roderick |
136 | ″ | schema:givenName | George K. |
137 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01077676271.09 |
138 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
139 | sg:person.01137600007.12 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.508595.4 |
140 | ″ | schema:familyName | Davies |
141 | ″ | schema:givenName | Neil |
142 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01137600007.12 |
143 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
144 | sg:person.012114307644.44 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.508595.4 |
145 | ″ | schema:familyName | Grandgirard |
146 | ″ | schema:givenName | Julie |
147 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.012114307644.44 |
148 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
149 | sg:person.01236235275.65 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.266097.c |
150 | ″ | schema:familyName | Hoddle |
151 | ″ | schema:givenName | Mark S. |
152 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.01236235275.65 |
153 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
154 | sg:person.015057074011.82 | schema:affiliation | grid-institutes:grid.508595.4 |
155 | ″ | schema:familyName | Petit |
156 | ″ | schema:givenName | Jérôme N. |
157 | ″ | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/discover/publication?and_facet_researcher=ur.015057074011.82 |
158 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Person |
159 | sg:pub.10.1007/978-1-4899-7214-9 | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1051217815 |
160 | ″ | ″ | https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4899-7214-9 |
161 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:CreativeWork |
162 | sg:pub.10.1007/s10530-007-9116-y | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1016155102 |
163 | ″ | ″ | https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-007-9116-y |
164 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:CreativeWork |
165 | sg:pub.10.1007/s10530-007-9172-3 | schema:sameAs | https://app.dimensions.ai/details/publication/pub.1047327526 |
166 | ″ | ″ | https://doi.org/10.1007/s10530-007-9172-3 |
167 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:CreativeWork |
168 | grid-institutes:grid.266097.c | schema:alternateName | Center for Invasion Biology, University of California, 92521, Riverside, CA, USA |
169 | ″ | schema:name | Center for Invasion Biology, University of California, 92521, Riverside, CA, USA |
170 | ″ | ″ | Department of Entomology, University of California, 92521, Riverside, CA, USA |
171 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |
172 | grid-institutes:grid.47840.3f | schema:alternateName | Environmental Science, Policy and Management, Division of Insect Biology, University of California, 94720, Berkeley, CA, USA |
173 | ″ | schema:name | Environmental Science, Policy and Management, Division of Insect Biology, University of California, 94720, Berkeley, CA, USA |
174 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |
175 | grid-institutes:grid.508595.4 | schema:alternateName | Richard B. Gump South Pacific Research Station, University of California, Berkeley, BP 244, 98728, Moorea, French Polynesia |
176 | ″ | schema:name | Richard B. Gump South Pacific Research Station, University of California, Berkeley, BP 244, 98728, Moorea, French Polynesia |
177 | ″ | rdf:type | schema:Organization |