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Introduced to US; native to Cuba, the Bahamas, and the Cayman Islands.
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Introduced to US; native to Cuba and the Bahamas; range expansion via the trade of potted plants with eggs laid in the soil.
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Introduced to the Americas; native to Sub-Saharan Africa.
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Introduced to Australia, native to Southeast Asia. Introduction to Australia began in the 1860s.
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Introduced to US; native to the Middle East and Southern Asia (India, China, Thailand). Range expanded to Florida as an escaped aviculture species.
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Introduced to the Americas; native to Spain and Portugal, Africa, and Asia. Its natural range has expanded over the last century along with the expansion of cattle ranching.
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Introduced to NZ; native to Southeast Asia and Australia. Range expansion as an escaped ornamental species.
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Introduced to US; Feral domestic animal native to Southeast Asia
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Introduced to US; Feral domestic animal native to South America
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Introduced to US and NZ; native to Europe and Asia. Range expansion to most of the world through a combination of intentional releases and cargo stowaways.
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Introduced to Australia, native to Asia. Range expansion due to its intentional release to control insect populations and its ability to thrive in urban environments. It is considered one of the wo... Mais
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Introduced to NZ; breeds in paleoarctic and migratory through Europe, Middle East, and North Africa. ssp. clarkei introduced to NZ and Australia via the acclimatization movement.
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Introduced to Australia, native to tropical Asia. Range expansion due to populations of escaped cage-birds.
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Introduced to eastern North America; native to Mexico and southwestern US, introduced to the rest of the continent as a released cagebird.
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Introduced to North America; Feral domestic animal native to Eurasia and North Africa. It is considered one of the world's worst invasive species.
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Introduced to the Americas; Feral domesticated animal native to the Middle East. Range expansion due to human use as pest control and companion. Descended from the Egyptian wildcat, and originally ... Mais
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Introduced to the Americas; Feral domestic animal likely native to ancient Europe. Range expansion due to extensive association with humans. Descended from Pleistocene Wolf. The first known remains... Mais
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Introduced to US and NZ; Feral domestic animal native to Eurasia and at one point also North America
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Artificially hybridized species; "Sunshine bass" produced and exported from Florida. They are hatchery-produced and stocked. Cannot reproduce on their own.
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Introduced to US (south Florida); native to Central America, released into the Everglades probably as an escaped or released aquaculture species.
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Introduced to FL, native to South America. Range expansion into US first documented in 1995.
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Introduced to US; native to South America. Range expansion into US via aquarium releases in Texas and Florida, and has now spread to other states. It is considered one of the world's worst invasive... Mais
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Introduced to North America; native to southeast Asia. Range has expanded to most of the world due to its habit of hanging out on freight containers.
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Introduced to the US, native to South America. Range expansion due to rail and ship stowaways.
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Introduced to the Americas; native to eastern Asia. Range expansion due to industrial shipping.
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Introduced to North America; native to Japan, but range has expanded through most of the world as a common greenhouse pest.
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Introduced to North America; native to the eastern Medditeranian. Range expansion to broader Eurasia, Australia, New Zealand, and North America as a "cabbageworm" along human trade routes.
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Introduced in the US; native range is unknown but likely to be in Asia and/or Africa. Range expansion as a greenhouse pest and house pest in tropical climates.
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Introduced to FL; native to Mexico and arid habitats of the southern US
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Introduced to US; native to central and south South America. It was first introduced to the US by cargo ship to the state of Alabama in the 1930s, and from there spread throughout the southeastern ... Mais
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Introduced to North America. Free-range domestic insect native to Africa or Asia. With human assistance, range has expanded to every continent except Antartica. Wild population is likely extinct.
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Introduced to US; most likely native to Europe. A common pest species associated with domestic households and museums, it is known for damaging natural fibers and biological collections.
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Introduced to North America; native to eastern Asia. Range has expanded to most continents from released populations used to control the populations of crop insects such as aphids.
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Introduced to North America; native to eastern Australia. Range expansion North America, Europe, and others due to its use as a method of biological control agent.
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Introduced to US; native to Sri Lanka. Spread to Florida through unknown means and was first detected in 2000.
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Cosmopolitan species that prefers tropical climates; possibly native to Africa. Range expansion due to shipping and commerce.
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Introduced in the Americas; native to western Europe and the Mediterranian coast. Introduced to many temperate coasts through shipping, probably stowing away between the planks of ships
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Introduced to North America; native to Europe, esp. the Mediterranian. Range expansion to most of the world by hitching rides in soil and on plants, and in some cases intentionally shipped as pets.
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Introduced to mainland US; native to Australia, Asia, and Hawaii. Range expansion into US, NZ, French Polynesia, and Bermuda.
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Introduced to US; native to southwestern and eastern Asia. its native range has expanded due to its use as an ornamental plant.
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Introduced to the Americas; native to Europe and Asia. Its range has spread globally due to it's cultivation as a forage crop.
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Introduced to Iceland; native to North America. It was introduced intentionally in the 20th century to help combat erosion as part of the reforestation project. However, it is known to sometimes co... Mais
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Introduced to the southeastern US; native to Sub-Saharan Africa, Madagascar, and Yemen. Range expansion due to use as a forage plant until it was discovered to be toxic to livestock.
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Introduced in US; Native to South America. Range expansion to coastal and marsh environments in Africa the southeastern US.