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The
287 alien marine invertebrate species make up about 7 % of the known marine
and brackish water invertebrate fauna in the Hawaiian Islands (4099 species).
Arthropods have been the most successful marine invaders, with 71 suspected
alien crustacean species, while 53 alien molluscs have made it to Hawaii.
Due to the large number of alien marine invertebrates in Hawaii and the
limited amount of information known for most of them, we can highlight
only a few of these nonindigenous species in this guidebook.
The greatest
number of introduced marine invertebrates have probably arrived to Hawaii
through hull fouling, but many may have also arrived with solid ballast
and in ballast water.
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We consider
201 species (70%) to be introduced, and 86 species (30%) cryptogenic (not
demonstratively native or introduced). Two hundred forty eight (87%) have
become established, 15 (5%) arrived but failed to become established,
6 (2%) were intercepted, and the population status of 18 species (6%)
is unknown.
The
nonindigenous invertebrate species in the Hawaiian Islands are primarily
of Indo-Pacific/Philippines Islands region origin. A surprising number
of species from the tropical western Atlantic/Caribbean region have invaded
Hawaii as well.
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