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Interceptions of nonindigenous plant pests at US ports of entry and border crossings over a 17-year period

机译:在17年内在美国入境口岸和边境口岸截获非本土植物害虫

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Despite the substantial impacts of nonindigenous plant pests and weeds, relatively little is known about the pathways by which these organisms arrive in the U.S. One source of such information is the Port Information Network (PIN) database, maintained by the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Service (APHIS) since 1984. The PIN database is comprised of records of pests intercepted by APHIS personnel during inspections of travelers' baggage, cargo, conveyances and related items arriving at U.S. ports of entry and border crossings. Each record typically includes the taxonomic identify of the pest, its country of origin, and information related to the commodity and interception site. We summarized more than 725,000 pest interceptions recorded in PIN from 1984 to 2000 to examine origins, interception sites and modes of transport for nonindigenous insects, mites, mollusks, nematodes, plant pathogens and weeds. Roughly 62% of intercepted pests were associated with baggage, 30% were associated with cargo and 7% were associated with plant propagative material. Pest interceptions occurred most commonly at airports (73%), U.S.-Mexico land border crossings (13%) and marine ports (9%). Insects dominated the database, comprising 73 to 84% of the records annually, with the orders Homoptera, Lepidoptera and Diptera collectively accounting for over 75% of the insect records. Plant pathogens, weeds and mollusks accounted for 13, 7 and 1.5% of all pest records, respectively, while mites and nematodes comprised less than 1% of the records. Pests were intercepted from at least 259 different locations. Common origins included Mexico, Central and South American countries, the Caribbean and Asia. Within specific commodity pathways, richness of the pest taxa generally increased linearly with the number of interceptions. Application of PIN data for statistically robust predictions is limited by nonrandom sampling protocols, but the data provide a valuable historical record of the array of nonindigenous organisms transported to the U.S. through international trade and travel.
机译:尽管非本地植物病虫害和杂草产生了重大影响,但有关这些生物到达美国的途径知之甚少,此类信息的一个来源是由美国农业,动物部维护的港口信息网(PIN)数据库。自1984年以来一直是植物健康检查服务(APHIS)的一部分。PIN数据库包含APHIS人员在检查到达美国入境口岸和边境口岸的旅客的行李,货物,运输工具和相关物品时截获的有害生物的记录。每个记录通常包括有害生物的生物分类标识,其起源国以及与商品和拦截地点有关的信息。我们总结了1984年至2000年PIN中记录的725,000多个害虫拦截情况,以检查非本地昆虫,螨,软体动物,线虫,植物病原体和杂草的起源,拦截地点和运输方式。大约62%的有害生物与行李有关,30%与货物有关,7%与植物繁殖材料有关。害虫拦截最常见的是机场(73%),美墨陆路过境点(13%)和海港(9%)。昆虫在数据库中占主导地位,每年占记录的73%至84%,同翅目,鳞翅目和双翅目共占昆虫记录的75%以上。植物病原体,杂草和软体动物分别占所有有害生物记录的13%,7%和1.5%,而螨和线虫则不到记录的1%。至少有259个不同地点截获了害虫。共同起源包括墨西哥,中美洲和南美国家,加勒比海地区和亚洲。在特定的商品途径中,有害生物分类群的丰富度通常随拦截次数线性增加。 PIN数据在统计上可靠的预测中的应用受到非随机抽样协议的限制,但该数据提供了通过国际贸易和旅行运往美国的一系列非本土生物的宝贵历史记录。

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