Global Register of Introduced and Invasive Species - Norway

Checklist
Latest version published by Invasive Species Specialist Group ISSG on Dec 19, 2023 Invasive Species Specialist Group ISSG
Publication date:
19 December 2023
License:
CC-BY 4.0

Download the latest version of this resource data as a Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A) or the resource metadata as EML or RTF:

Data as a DwC-A file download 4,501 records in English (133 KB) - Update frequency: other maintenance period
Metadata as an EML file download in English (56 KB)
Metadata as an RTF file download in English (35 KB)

Description

The Global Register of Introduced and Invasive Species (GRIIS) presents validated and verified national checklists of introduced (alien) and invasive alien species at the country, territory, and associated island level. Checklists are living entities, especially for biological invasions given the growing nature of the problem. GRIIS checklists are based on a published methodology and supported by the Integrated Publishing Tool that jointly enable ongoing improvements and updates to expand their taxonomic coverage and completeness. Phase 1 of the project focused on developing validated and verified checklists of countries that are Party to the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD). Phase 2 aimed to achieve global coverage including non-party countries and all overseas territories of countries, e.g. those of the Netherlands, France, and the United Kingdom. All kingdoms of organisms occurring in all environments and systems are covered. Checklists are reviewed and verified by networks of country or species experts. Verified checklists/ species records, as well as those under review, are presented on the online GRIIS website (www.griis.org) in addition to being published through the GBIF Integrated Publishing Tool.

Data Records

The data in this checklist resource has been published as a Darwin Core Archive (DwC-A), which is a standardized format for sharing biodiversity data as a set of one or more data tables. The core data table contains 4,501 records.

2 extension data tables also exist. An extension record supplies extra information about a core record. The number of records in each extension data table is illustrated below.

Taxon (core)
4501
Distribution 
4501
SpeciesProfile 
4501

This IPT archives the data and thus serves as the data repository. The data and resource metadata are available for download in the downloads section. The versions table lists other versions of the resource that have been made publicly available and allows tracking changes made to the resource over time.

Versions

The table below shows only published versions of the resource that are publicly accessible.

How to cite

Researchers should cite this work as follows:

Hilmo O, Husa V, Haugland B T, Steen H, Eilertsen M, Dervo B K, Kooij J V D, Forsgren E, Finstad A, Knutsen H, Gjelland K Ø, Hesthagen T, Bærum K M, Wienerroither R, Stokke B G, Gjershaug J O, Solvang R, Skarpaas O, Schei F H, Hegre H, Solstad H, Fløistad I S, Vollering J M M, Westergaard K B, Pedersen O, Alm T, Vandvik V, Velle G, Kjærstad G, Johnsen S I, Jensen T, Mortensen S, Agnalt A, Glenner H, Falkenhaug T, Høitomt T, Eldegard K, Rolandsen C, Holand Ø, Magnusson C, Karlsbakk E, Hamnes I, Tangvik M P, Talgø V, Nordén B, Børja I, Nordén J, Perminow J I S, Pettersson M, Andreasen M, Endrestøl A, Laugsand A E, Staverløkk A, Hatteland B A, Slagsvold P K, Åström S, Olberg S, Gammelmo Ø, Pagad S (2023). Global Register of Introduced and Invasive Species - Norway. Version 1.16. Invasive Species Specialist Group ISSG. Checklist dataset. https://cloud.gbif.org/griis/resource?r=griis-brunei-norway&v=1.16

Rights

Researchers should respect the following rights statement:

The publisher and rights holder of this work is Invasive Species Specialist Group ISSG. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution (CC-BY 4.0) License.

GBIF Registration

This resource has been registered with GBIF, and assigned the following GBIF UUID: 38de3b7a-5af3-4b6f-a1c5-4c0aa6abf010.  Invasive Species Specialist Group ISSG publishes this resource, and is itself registered in GBIF as a data publisher endorsed by Participant Node Managers Committee.

Keywords

Checklist; Inventorythematic; Alien; Invasive; Validated and Verified; country_NO; Checklist

Contacts

Olga Hilmo
  • Originator
Seniorrådgiver
Artsdatabanken - Norwegian Biodiversity Information Centre
NO
Vivian Husa
  • Originator
Algae - Leader
Institute of Marine Research
NO
Barbro Taraldset Haugland
  • Originator
Algae
Institute of Marine Research
NO
Henning Steen
  • Originator
Algae
Institute of Marine Research
NO
Mette Eilertsen
  • Originator
Algae
Rådgivende biologer
Børre Kind Dervo
  • Originator
Leader - Amphibians and reptiles
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Jeroen van der Kooij
  • Originator
Amphibians and reptiles
Naturformidling van der Kooij
Elisabet Forsgren
  • Originator
Leader - Fish (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Anders Finstad
  • Originator
Fish (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
NTNU University Museum
NO
Halvor Knutsen
  • Originator
Fish (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
Institute of Marine Research
NO
Karl Øystein Gjelland
  • Originator
Fish (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Trygve Hesthagen
  • Originator
Fish (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Kim Magnus Bærum
  • Originator
Fish (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Rupert Wienerroither
  • Originator
Fish (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
Institute of Marine Research
NO
Bård Gunnar Stokke
  • Originator
Leader - Birds
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Jan Ove Gjershaug
  • Originator
Birds
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Rune Solvang
  • Originator
Birds
Asplan Viak
NO
Olav Skarpaas
  • Originator
Leader - Vascular plants (Norway and Svalbard)
University of Oslo (UiO), Natural History Museum
NO
Fride Høistad Schei
  • Originator
Birds
Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO)
NO
Hanne Hegre
  • Originator
Vascular plants (Norway and Svalbard)
FlowerPower
NO
Heidi Solstad
  • Originator
Vascular plants (Norway and Svalbard)
Multiconsult
NO
Inger Sundheim Fløistad
  • Originator
Vascular plants (Norway and Svalbard)
Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO)
NO
Julien M. M. Vollering
  • Originator
Vascular plants (Norway and Svalbard)
Western Norway University of Applied Sciences/ University of Oslo (UiO), Natural History Museum
NO
Kristine B. Westergaard
  • Originator
Vascular plants (Norway and Svalbard)
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Oddvar Pedersen
  • Originator
Vascular plants (Norway and Svalbard)
University of Oslo (UiO), Natural History Museum
NO
Torbjørn Alm
  • Originator
Vascular plants (Norway and Svalbard)
The Arctic University of Norway (UiT)
NO
Vigdis Vandvik
  • Originator
Vascular plants (Norway and Svalbard)
University of Bergen (UiB)
NO
Gaute Velle
  • Originator
Leader - Limnic invertebrates
University of Bergen (UiB)/ Norwegian Research Centre
NO
Gaute Kjærstad
  • Originator
Limnic invertebrates
NTNU University Museum
NO
Stein Ivar Johnsen
  • Originator
Limnic invertebrates
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Thomas Jensen
  • Originator
Limnic invertebrates
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Stein Mortensen
  • Originator
Leader - Marin invertebrates (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
Institute of Marine Research
NO
Ann-Lisbeth Agnalt
  • Originator
Marin invertebrates (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
Institute of Marine Research
NO
Henrik Glenner
  • Originator
Marin invertebrates (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
University of Bergen (UiB)
NO
Tone Falkenhaug
  • Originator
Marin invertebrates (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
Institute of Marine Research
NO
Vivian Husa
  • Originator
Marin invertebrates (Norway and Svalbard with sea areas)
Institute of Marine Research
NO
Torbjørn Høitomt
  • Originator
Mosses
Biofokus
NO
Katrine Eldegard
  • Originator
Leader - Mammals (Norway and Svalbard)
Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)
NO
Christer Rolandsen
  • Originator
Mammals (Norway and Svalbard)
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Jeroen van der Kooij
  • Originator
Mammals (Norway and Svalbard)
Naturformidling van der Kooij
NO
Øystein Holand
  • Originator
Mammals (Norway and Svalbard)
Norwegian University of Life Sciences (NMBU)
NO
Christer Magnusson
  • Originator
Leader - Roundworms and flatworms
Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO)
NO
Egil Karlsbakk
  • Originator
Roundworms and flatworms
University of Bergen (UiB)/ Institute of Marine Research
NO
Inger Hamnes
  • Originator
Roundworms and flatworms
Veterinary Institute
NO
Marte Persdatter Tangvik
  • Originator
Roundworms and flatworms
Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO)
NO
Venche Talgø
  • Originator
Leader - Fungi, Sopper, Chromista and bacteria
Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO)
NO
Björn Nordén
  • Originator
Fungi, Sopper, Chromista and bacteria
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Isabella Børja
  • Originator
Fungi, Sopper, Chromista and bacteria
Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO)
NO
Jenni Nordén
  • Originator
Fungi, Sopper, Chromista and bacteria
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Juliana Irina Spies Perminow
  • Originator
Fungi, Sopper, Chromista and bacteria
Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO)
NO
Martin Pettersson
  • Originator
Fungi, Sopper, Chromista and bacteria
Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO)
NO
Mathias Andreasen
  • Originator
Fungi, Sopper, Chromista and bacteria
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Anders Endrestøl
  • Originator
Leader - Terrestrial invertebrates
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA
NO
Arne Endre Laugsand
  • Originator
Terrestrial invertebrates
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Arnstein Staverløkk
  • Originator
Terrestrial invertebrates
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Bjørn Arild Hatteland
  • Originator
Terrestrial invertebrates
Norwegian Institute of Bioeconomy Research (NIBIO)
NO
Per Kristian Slagsvold
  • Originator
Terrestrial invertebrates
University of Oslo (UiO), Natural History Museum
NO
Sandra Åström
  • Originator
Terrestrial invertebrates
Norwegian Institute for Nature Research (NINA)
NO
Stefan Olberg
  • Originator
Terrestrial invertebrates
Biofokus
NO
Øivind Gammelmo
  • Originator
Terrestrial invertebrates
Biofokus
NO
Shyama Pagad
  • Metadata Provider
  • Originator
  • User
  • Point Of Contact
Deputy Chair- Information
IUCN SSC Invasive Species Specialist Group (ISSG)
NZ

Geographic Coverage

Norway

Bounding Coordinates South West [57.041, 1.055], North East [70.081, 23.73]

Taxonomic Coverage

Animalia, Bacteria, Chromista, Fungi, Plantae, Protozoa, Viruses

Kingdom Animalia, Bacteria, Chromista, Fungi, Plantae, Protozoa, Viruses

Project Data

The Global Register of Introduced and Invasive Species (GRIIS) presents validated and verified checklists of introduced (alien) and invasive alien species at the country, territory level. The development of the GRIIS resource is an initiative supported by the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity (CBD) and was originally implemented within the framework of the Global Invasive Alien Species Information Partnership (GIASIPartnership). The IUCN SSC Invasive Species Specialist Group (ISSG) is the project lead and includes a dedicated GRIIS unit. The resource is designed to support national governments to make progress to achieve invasive alien species targets under the Convention on Biological Diversity and the Sustainable Development Goals; especially in the development of their National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plans, their National Invasive Alien Species Strategy and Action Plan (NIASAP), target setting and monitoring.

Title Global Register of Introduced and Invasive Species GRIIS
Identifier GRIIS
Funding The GRIIS initiative was developed within the framework of the GIASIPartnership, with co-funding from the European Union through the Secretariat of the Convention on Biological Diversity. As coordinator of GIASIP, and on behalf of CBD Secretariat, GBIF has supported the development of GRIIS and its integration into the GBIF data infrastructure to ensure interoperability. In July 2019, GBIF provided direct funding from its core budget to support the completion of GRIIS lists for all countries, EU Overseas Territories and selected islands by March 2020.
Study Area Description GRIIS has global coverage, including overseas territories and regions. Where appropriate, sub-lists have been created for Oceanic Islands- for e.g. Soqotra of Yemen and the Juan Fernandez Islands of Chile. Taxonomic coverage includes all kingdoms of organisms: Animalia, Bacteria, Chromista, Fungi, Plantae, Protozoa, Viruses. The annotations recorded in GRIIS include- Species name and authorship, synonyms if used and authorship, Higher taxonomy (kingdom, phylum, class, order and family), Environment/system in which the species occurs (terrestrial, freshwater, brackish, marine, host), provenance or origin of the species, invasive status of the alien species. The inclusion of additional annotations are planned, including the date of introduction or first record of the alien species, type of introduction (deliberate or accidental), pathways of introduction, impact mechanism and the global EICAT (Environmental Impact Classification of Alien Taxa) category assigned to the species.
Design Description The Global Register of Invasive Species (GRIS) was developed as a concept and prototype by the ISSG in 2006 as part of a project undertaken for the Defenders of Wildlife on the Regulation of Live Animal Imports into the United States. Between 2011-2020, the concept was revisited and expanded by the ISSG to address Aichi Biodiversity Target 9 and support its achievement - with the development of the Global Register of Introduced and Invasive Species (GRIIS). GRIIS hosted by the ISSG compiles annotated and verified national checklists of introduced (alien) and invasive alien species. Development and population of the GRIIS was undertaken by the ISSG within the framework of activities of the Information Synthesis and Assessment Working Group of the Global Invasive Alien Species Information Partnership. The GRIIS checklist is an annotated species catalogue, or inventory, recorded from a country, an island, protected area, or area of high biodiversity value. Following GBIF's guide to best practices for publishing species checklists (Hanmer et al 2012), the GRIIS checklist includes taxonomic information in a standard way. The checklist is compiled by a team of experts and non-specialists including citizen scientists that have knowledge of species taxonomy, access to reliable and authoritative source information that can be validated and verified (for methods please see Pagad et al. 2018). A summary of the process • The ISSG GRIIS unit conducts a comprehensive review of authoritative and credible information sources and develops a draft annotated country checklist of introduced (alien) and invasive alien species. • Annotations include species name (accepted name and synonym if used by the source), higher taxonomy, environment/system in which the species occurs, biological status (provenance (alien or not) and invasiveness-based on evidence of impact), • Country editor/editors are identified and consulted for advice, including knowledge of additional key data sources • Draft checklists are submitted to country editors for a review of both accuracy of information and to identify any significant gaps. Revisions are implemented based on feedback. • Every species record includes a check (indication) if the status has been verified as such by country editors. In cases where ‘evidence of impact’ information is gathered from peer-reviewed literature or reports for the country in question, the species status is designated as 'verified'. • Names of the editors as well as the complete reference list of sources consulted is recorded. Key references used to develop the GRIIS checklists are provided as part of the metadata. References for every species recorded are available on request. • Incremental updates are implemented on an on-going basis. Bi-annual major updates are planned for all checklists. Notes on the annotations • Species names recorded from source information are referred to the GBIF taxonomic editor; if the source species name is a synonym, the accepted name is also recorded. This process contributes to the application of a consistent taxonomy across all inventories. • Higher taxonomy - Kingdom, Phylum, Class, Order, Genus and Species with species authority. • Environment system – terrestrial / freshwater / brackish / marine/ host and combinations thereof • Provenance - a) as recorded by the source information, b) as interpreted by the compiler - three options are applied alien, native/alien (if the species is native in a part of a country and alien in another part), provenance uncertain/cryptogenic • Invasiveness is based on evidence of impact Note: In cases where country editors have not been identified, the checklist is published after the GRIIS unit validates the checklist. The GRIIS team members are listed as originators of the checklist. The checklist is reviewed by country editors once they have been identified and the expert’s names are listed as originators of the checklist.

The personnel involved in the project:

Shyama Pagad

Sampling Methods

This annotated checklist is focused on introduced (alien) and invasive species that are known to occur in Norway The International Union for Conservation of Nature, (IUCN) describes an Introduced/ Alien and Invasive alien species as follows: An Introduced or Alien species means a species, subspecies, or lower taxon occurring outside of its natural range (past or present) and dispersal potential (i.e. outside the range it occupies naturally or could not occupy without direct or indirect introduction or care by humans) and includes any part, gametes or propagule of such species that might survive and subsequently reproduce. An Invasive Alien Species is an alien species which becomes established in natural or semi-natural ecosystems or habitat, is an agent of change, and threatens native biological diversity. In GRIIS, species are recorded as having an impact (as 'yes' under 'isInvasive') if there is evidence of the species negatively impacting biodiversity, and including species that are widespread, spreading rapidly or present in high abundance (Pagad et al. 2018). This usage is relevant to the purpose of GRIIS, and consistent with the concept of impact as formulated by Parker et al. (1999) and now widely used (e.g. Didham et al. 2005, Strayer et al. 2006, McGeoch et al. 2010, 2012, Vila et al. 2011), where impact is a function not only of the per capita effect of an individual organism, but is a combined function of the effect, abundance and range size of a species. Impact can of course be defined in different ways, driven by different objectives, such as its usage in EICAT where it is defined as a measurable change to the properties of an ecosystem caused by an alien taxon (Hawkins et al. 2015).

Study Extent The geographic focus of this checklist is Norway
Quality Control The draft checklist is compiled by collating data and information through a comprehensive literature overview. Additional steps implemented to control the quality of the data are described below. Taxonomic harmonization and normalization using the GBIF taxonomic backbone To harmonize all species names across countries, species lists are subjected to a normalization process in which taxon rank and taxonomic status are identified and assigned. Spelling and other errors in assigning species authorship are also corrected. Data validation The Project Personnel complete a review and validate all the annotations, especially those on provenance and 'invasive' status of the species based on evidence of impact. Data verification The checklist is submitted to a network of country editors for a review of both accuracy of records, annotations, and identification of any significant gaps in the data. Data verification is an iterative process and the activity for a particular version is declared complete on agreement of all relevant country editors (see versioning details below). One of the key tenets of the GRIIS project has been engagement with country editors in the verification process and as custodians of country checklists. While this has been possible in the majority of countries, for a small number of countries this engagement process has not succeeded in delivering a verified checklist. In these cases, the GRIIS Project Personnel have completed the validation of the species records but continue to work towards identifying country experts.

Method step description:

  1. Data collation and categorization Data filtering and categorization/ classification Taxonomic harmonization and normalization Data validation Data verification
  2. The published methods underpinning GRIIS and each checklist are described in Pagad et al 2018.

Bibliographic Citations

  1. Hamer, M., Victor, J., Smith, G.F. (2012). Best Practice Guide for Compiling, Maintaining and Disseminating National Species Checklists, version 1.0, released in October 2012. Copenhagen: Global Biodiversity Information Facility, 40 pp, ISBN: 87-92020-48-8, Accessible at http://www.gbif.org/orc/?doc_id=4752.
  2. Pagad S, Genovesi P, Carnevali L, Schigel D, McGeoch MA (2018) Introducing the Global Register of Introduced and Invasive Species. Scientific Data, 5, 170202. https://www.nature.com/articles/sdata2017202
  3. Parker I, Simberloff D, Lonsdale W. et al. (1999) Impact: Toward a Framework for Understanding the Ecological Effects of Invaders. Biological Invasions 1, 3–19 (1999). https://doi.org/10.1023/A:1010034312781
  4. Didham RK, Tylianakis JM, Hutchison MA, Ewers RM, Gemmell NJ. (2005) Are invasive species the drivers of ecological change? Trends Ecol Evol. 2005 Sep;20(9):470-4. Epub 2005 Jul 21.
  5. Strayer DL, Eviner VT, Jeschke JM, Pace ML. (2006) Understanding the long-term effects of species invasions. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 21(11):645-51
  6. McGeoch MA, Butchart SHM, Spear D, Marais E. Kleynhans EJ, Symes A, Chanson J, Hoffmann M. (2010) Global indicators of biological invasion: species numbers, biodiversity impact and policy responses. Diversity and Distributions Volume16, Issue1 January 2010.
  7. McGeoch, M.A., Spear, D., Kleynhans, E.J. & Marais, E. 2012. Uncertainty in invasive alien species listing. Ecological Applications 22, 959-971. 10.1890/11-1252.1
  8. Vilà M, Espinar JL, Hejda M, Hulme PE, Jarošík V, Maron JL, Pergl J, Schaffner U, Sun Y, Pyšek P. (2011) Ecological impacts of invasive alien plants: a meta‐analysis of their effects on species, communities and ecosystems. Ecology Letters Volume14, Issue7 July 2011 Pages 702-708
  9. Hawkins CL, Bacher S, Essl F, Hulme PE, Jeschke JM, Kühn I, Kumschick S, Nentwig W, Pergl J, Pyšek P, Rabitsch W, Richardson DM, Vilà M, Wilson JRU, Genovesi P, Blackburn TM. (2015) Framework and guidelines for implementing the proposed IUCN Environmental Impact Classification for Alien Taxa (EICAT) Diversity and Distributions Volume21, Issue11 November 2015 Pages 1360-1363
  10. Norwegian Biodiversity Information Centre (2018) Alien species in Norway

Additional Metadata

Versioning The GRIIS checklists are dynamic and reflect the latest known status of alien and invasive species presence and impacts. The original versions of each country checklist (v1.0) undergo two potential types of updates: 1. Major updates: These happen when batches of new species or records become available, usually addressing multiple taxonomic groups simultaneously. Each checklist is assigned a new version number after a major update (e.g. from v1.0 to v2.0). 2. Incremental updates: These are smaller ongoing updates involving the addition of new species or records based on new publications as well as taxonomic or other updates. Incremental updates to a checklist are associated with a subversion number, e.g. v1.1. The checklist version number is visible/available on the citation.

Purpose The resource will be a support to countries to make progress to achieve Aichi Biodiversity Target 9 -in the development of their National Biodiversity Strategy and Action Plans, their National Invasive Alien Species Strategy and Action Plan, target setting and monitoring.
Maintenance Description Updates with any new data and any revisions of existing data will be made on a biannual basis
Alternative Identifiers 38de3b7a-5af3-4b6f-a1c5-4c0aa6abf010
https://cloud.gbif.org/griis/resource?r=griis-brunei-norway