This is the final version of the article that is published ahead of the print and online issue Keeping wild animals as pets has become a popular hobby that has increased around the world (Kopecký et al. 2013;Mori et al. 2017). Many of these species are traded for entertainment (da Nóbrega Alves et al. 2010), profit (van Wilgen et al. 2008Mori et al. 2017) and ornamentation (Murray et al. 2012;Kopecký et al. 2013). The internet has increased the opportunity for trade in live animals (Mendiratta et al. 2017). A range of taxa including spiders (Yen and Ro 2013; Hauke and Herzig 2017), amphibians (Measey et al. 2017), birds (Mori et al. 2017), small mammals (Lankau et al. 2017) and reptiles (van Wilgen et al. 2010) are frequently traded in this way. The pet trade has become an important pathway for the introduction of non-native species to new regions (van Wilgen et al. 2008; Hulme 2015; Measey et al. 2017; Mori et al. 2017). These pets may accidentally escape from captivity (Mazzotti and Harvey 2012), but the deliberate release of pets by owners is recognised as a major problem (Hulme 2015; Stringham and Lockwood 2018; Maceda-Veiga et al. 2019). Introduced pet species are released into the wild for several reasons, including aggressiveness, fear of zoonotic diseases, unwanted gifts (Padilla and Williams 2004; Reaser and Meyers 2007) or because they become too large to keep (Holmberg et al. 2015). Many species that escape, or are released, may be unable to survive and establish self-sustaining populations (Zenni and Nuñez 2013). However, those species that successfully establish and become invasive can have severe environmental and economic impacts (Nelufule et al. 2020;Shivambu et al. 2020aShivambu et al. , 2020b. Some of the species damage ecosystems (Martin and Coetzee 2011), compete for resources with native species (Mori et al. 2017;Nunes et al. 2017) and carry pathogens that threaten public health (Travis et al. 2011) and agriculture (Witmer andHall 2011;Gibson and Yong 2017), and cause biodiversity loss (Engeman et al. 2007;Faulkes 2010).A recent review by Lockwood et al. (2019) highlights the urgent necessity to understand better how the exotic pet trade contributes to invasions in order to devise strategies to limit its harmful impacts. An important predictor of whether a species is likely to become invasive in a new region is its history of invasion elsewhere (Hulme 2012),