Title: The Management of Invasive Species in Marine
1- The Management of Invasive Species in Marine
Coastal Environments - Module 7
- Developing a National Strategic Framework
2Module 7 Objectives
- Outline the essential components and content of a
national strategic framework for Invasive Alien
Species (IAS) management - Describe the key steps in the development and
implementation of a national framework
3Context of IAS Management
- Involves a wide variety of stakeholders
- Must comply with international/regional
obligations - Must cover marine freshwater terrestrial
environments
In order to deal with invasive alien species,
a National Strategic Framework will need to be
established.
4National Strategic Framework
should include the following elements
- A national IAS strategy
- Operational Arrangements (Action Plan) for the
implementation of the strategy - Institutional arrangements and responsibilities
(whose job is it? Who decides? How will agencies
work together?) - Legal / regulatory aspects
5Steps in the Development of a National Strategic
Framework
- Designation of Lead Agency
- Establishment of Task Force
- Assessment of the IAS problem
- Development of National Strategy and Action Plan
- Implementation of the National Strategy,
including - - appropriate institutional structures
- - legal framework
- - Action Plan
6Lead Agency
- Has principal responsibility for coordinating the
development implementation of the National
Strategy - It is more common to designate an existing agency
as the lead agency. However, creating a new
entity is an alternative option - No particular agency is always best suited
depends on - the constitutional structure in the country
- The departmental/agency configuration
- The legal/regulatory aspects.
- The capability and resources of existing agencies
7Lead Agency
Has a Lead Agency been designated in your
country? Which is it? Does it play only a
coordinating role?
8IAS Task Force
- Membership should include all major stakeholders
-
- Should be established early on in the strategy
development process - Should be the precursor to a cross-sectoral
- advisory body for the implementation stage
- May form sub-groups to provide specialist input
for example, a Marine Task Group - The Chair of each group would then be on the
- Task Force
9Marine Task Group
Which agencies do you think should be, or are
involved in the management of marine and coastal
invasives in your country?
How much contact is there between these
agencies? And with other relevant stakeholder
groups?
10Marine Task Group
Membership should comprise representation from
all major stakeholders, such as
- Environmental administration including coastal
management. - Fisheries/marine resources administration.
- Health/quarantine administration.
- Transport/shipping administration
- Port and harbour authorities
- Industry (e.g. mariculture, shipping
associations, oil gas, mining) - Research community/academia.
- Environmental and other Non-governmental
organisation(s), as appropriate. - Indigenous people(s), local community groups (as
appropriate)
11Assessment of the IAS Problem
- What are the main pathways of introduction?
- What invasive species are already present, and
what damage are they causing to the environment,
resources, trade, health, livelihoods of rural
communities? - Are Protected Areas at risk?
- What are the economic costs?
- What are the existing institutional legal
arrangements? - Are stakeholders and the general public aware of
the issue? - What are constraints to managing IAS?
12The National Strategy
- Describes the vision, overall objectives and
scope, national policies, principles and
practices - Should be consistent with relevant international
requirements and other national commitments - Should identify key agencies and organisations
responsible for implementation of the actions
required - Should describe how coordination and co-operation
between the various agencies will be achieved - Should integrate IAS issues into other national
strategies (agriculture, forestry, fisheries etc)
13The National Action Plan
- The National Strategy includes high level actions
based on the issues identified in the assessment - The Action Plan translates these into more
specific activities with responsibilities,
timelines, funding etc - For example
- - in 2006, the Ministry of . Will
develop/revise the relevant legislation - - in 2007, the University of . Will establish a
monitoring programme with funding from - Must address the constraints identified in the
assessment
14Components / Content of National Strategy
- Status and trends of IAS in the country
identification of priorities - Main sectors (e.g. type of industry) pathways,
vectors and particular risks, - Identify government departments / agencies at all
levels (e.g. including regional) that have a
mandate relating to IAS, and their roles and
responsibilities under the strategy - Procedure/system for cooperation within and
between relevant agencies (and sectors and
institutions as appropriate) - Procedures/system for stakeholder participation
- Relevant legislation and regulations as well as
proposals for addressing gaps that were
identified in the review stage
15Components / Content of National Strategy cont.
- Outline of criteria for risk analysis, management
planning and mitigation - Requirements related to monitoring,
- Requirements / systems for training and capacity
building - Where appropriate, specific measures or policies
for isolated and biodiversity-rich ecosystems
(e.g. islands and archipelagos, protected areas) - Requirements for recovery of species/ecosystems
affected by IAS and ways to promote use of native
species - Requirements for public awareness efforts
- Research requirements
- Funding issues
16Implementing the National Strategy
- Establishing the recommended institutional
arrangements - Putting in place an appropriate legal frameworks
- Implementing the Action Plan (i.e. more specific
aspects of the strategy)
17Legal and Institutional Frameworks
- Law is used to implement policy objectives and
determine principles, standards and procedures to
achieve them - Allocates rights and responsibilities amongst the
roleplayers - Legal and institutional systems underpin the
mandate to act to address issues such as IAS - Establishing effective institutions is one of the
most important roles of legislation, though this
is often underestimated
18Common Weaknesses of Existing National Law and
Institutions
Some common problems include
- Fragmented legal and institutional frameworks
(cross-sectoral nature) - Weaknesses related to coverage and terminology
(eg. marine invasives) - Inconsistencies in provisions
- Problems related to compliance, enforcement and
remedies
19Key Requirements for National Legal frameworks
- Consistency in definitions and use of terminology
- Comprehensive geographic coverage (all
ecosystems) - Must provide for all aspects of IAS management
- Prevention
- Early detection/ rapid response
- Eradication
- Control mitigation (longer term)
20Implementation of the Action Plan
- Implement prevention measures
- Develop contingency plans
- Introduce management plans for existing
invasives - Establish monitoring and surveillance around key
entry points
21- Has a National Strategic Framework been set up in
your country to deal with Invasive Alien Species? - If so, does this framework focus on terrestrial,
aquatic freshwater or marine or does it take
responsibility for invasive alien species in
general? - A National Strategic Framework can be constituted
with representatives from the following groupings
or departments - coastal management including fisheries/marine
resources administration. - Health/quarantine administration.
- Transport/shipping administration
- Industry (e.g. mariculture, shipping
associations, oil gas, mining) - Science community/academia.
- Environmental management
- Non-governmental organisation(s), as appropriate.
- Indigenous people(s), local community (as
appropriate) - If you do not know of a National Strategic
Framework in your country, which groupings could
serve as representatives of the above, in a lead
agency? - Who would take overall responsibility for dealing
with IAMS? - What kind of strategy can you think of for
dealing with an invasion on a national,
provincial and municipal/local level i.e. how
would the reporting structure work, who would
carry out the contingency plans, who would do the
work at the location where invasion took place,
who would they report progress to etc. - A lead agency normally works on a national level,
what kind of supporting structures would you have
to deal with provincial problems and problems on
a municipal/local level.
22- If there is a lack of a framework it may be due
to the - following factors. How would you address these
problems - in your country?
- low public awareness and opposition to government
intervention - shortage and inaccessibility of scientific
information (for species identification, risk
analysis, detection and mitigation techniques
etc.) - absence of clear and agreed priorities for
action - ease of introduction and movement (e.g. through
the post), inadequate inspection and quarantine - inadequate monitoring capacity
- lack of effective emergency response measures
- outdated or inadequate legislation
- poor coordination between government agencies,
countries and other stakeholders