“…These vectors have been or now include the extensive niche areas on or in ocean-going vessels that transport fouling, entangled, and ballasted organisms, sea level (such as the Suez) and lock (Panama) canals, mariculture (aquaculture), the aquarium and saltwater bait industries, and long-distance rafting on anthropogenic debris. Reviews of some marine bionvasions successfully introduced via these mechanisms or corridors are available, for example, for North America (Cohen and Carlton, 1995; Ruiz et al, 2000, 2011, 2015), Europe (Wolff, 2005; Gollasch, 2006; Galil et al, 2014), the Mediterranean (Galil, 2009; Rilov and Galil, 2009; Ulman et al, 2017), the Azores (Cardigos et al, 2006) and Madeira (Canning-Clode et al, 2013), South Africa (Mead et al, 2011; Alexander et al, 2016), Argentina (Orensanz et al, 2002), Brazil (Ferreira et al, 2009); the Pacific coast of Mexico (Low-Pfeng and Peters-Recagno, 2012), Chile (Villasenor-Parada et al, 2017), the Hawaiian Islands (Carlton and Eldredge, 2009, 2015), Japan (Otani, 2006), China (Xiong et al, 2017), Korea (Park et al, 2017), Australia (Wyatt et al, 2005, and references therein; Sliwa et al, 2009), and New Zealand (Hayden et al, 2009). The majority of these introduced species—whether phytoplankton, foraminifera, other protists, invertebrates, fish, or plants—are recognized as neocosmopolitan taxa based upon morphological and other criteria noted above.…”