Pest Management and Phytosanitary Trade Barriers

The agricultural species that form the basis of the economies of most of the countries of the world have been largely introduced from other areas, clearly demonstrating that importation of alien species is not inherently detrimental at least from the human standpoint. However, many pests have bee...

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Những tác giả chính: Heather, Neil W, Hallman, Guy J
Định dạng: Sách
Ngôn ngữ:English
Được phát hành: CABI 2014
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Truy cập trực tuyến:https://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/36490
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Thư viện lưu trữ: Thư viện Trường Đại học Đà Lạt
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spelling oai:scholar.dlu.edu.vn:DLU123456789-364902023-11-11T05:22:34Z Pest Management and Phytosanitary Trade Barriers Heather, Neil W Hallman, Guy J Phytosanitary Pest The agricultural species that form the basis of the economies of most of the countries of the world have been largely introduced from other areas, clearly demonstrating that importation of alien species is not inherently detrimental at least from the human standpoint. However, many pests have been transported around the globe as well and cause a great amount of damage. It is estimated that the loss caused by invasive species globally is about US$1.4 1012 or 5% of the world gross national product (Pimentel et al., 2007). Although tens of thousands of species have invaded other lands, millions have not. Undoubtedly a great many potentially invasive species could cause significant economic and ecological damage to the diverse countries of the world. Phytosanitation aims to keep that damage and the number of new invasive species as low as possible through regulation of trade of items that could carry invasive species. But these requirements are a primary impediment to international trade, a key and growing component of most economies (Fig. 1.1). Mumford (2002) points out that domestic consumers ultimately pay for quarantine restrictions in higher prices for quarantined goods while domestic producers of those goods or, we might add, reasonable replacements for them, benefit. 2014-03-10T09:00:34Z 2014-03-10T09:00:34Z 2008 Book 978 1 84593 343 2 https://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/36490 en application/pdf CABI
institution Thư viện Trường Đại học Đà Lạt
collection Thư viện số
language English
topic Phytosanitary
Pest
spellingShingle Phytosanitary
Pest
Heather, Neil W
Hallman, Guy J
Pest Management and Phytosanitary Trade Barriers
description The agricultural species that form the basis of the economies of most of the countries of the world have been largely introduced from other areas, clearly demonstrating that importation of alien species is not inherently detrimental at least from the human standpoint. However, many pests have been transported around the globe as well and cause a great amount of damage. It is estimated that the loss caused by invasive species globally is about US$1.4 1012 or 5% of the world gross national product (Pimentel et al., 2007). Although tens of thousands of species have invaded other lands, millions have not. Undoubtedly a great many potentially invasive species could cause significant economic and ecological damage to the diverse countries of the world. Phytosanitation aims to keep that damage and the number of new invasive species as low as possible through regulation of trade of items that could carry invasive species. But these requirements are a primary impediment to international trade, a key and growing component of most economies (Fig. 1.1). Mumford (2002) points out that domestic consumers ultimately pay for quarantine restrictions in higher prices for quarantined goods while domestic producers of those goods or, we might add, reasonable replacements for them, benefit.
format Book
author Heather, Neil W
Hallman, Guy J
author_facet Heather, Neil W
Hallman, Guy J
author_sort Heather, Neil W
title Pest Management and Phytosanitary Trade Barriers
title_short Pest Management and Phytosanitary Trade Barriers
title_full Pest Management and Phytosanitary Trade Barriers
title_fullStr Pest Management and Phytosanitary Trade Barriers
title_full_unstemmed Pest Management and Phytosanitary Trade Barriers
title_sort pest management and phytosanitary trade barriers
publisher CABI
publishDate 2014
url https://scholar.dlu.edu.vn/thuvienso/handle/DLU123456789/36490
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