Title: The Next 30 Minutes. . .
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4The Next 30 Minutes. . .
Look at the overall Invasive Species problem
- What is an Invasive Species, anyway?
- How do invasive species differ from non-native
species? - Why should we be concerned?
- How do invasive species get introduced?
- Sample organisms (aquatic/terrestrial,
plant/animal, pathogen)
5Invasive Species
Species which have been transported
intentionally or unintentionally into a
geographic region outside their native ecosystem
and which have become established (reproducing in
self-sustaining populations) in that new
environment, often causing significant harm (or
potential of harm) to the environment, the
economy, and/or to human health
What They Arent
- Non-indigenous Species / Non-Native Species
- Exotic Species / Alien Species
- From other locations
- Not necessarily invasive or harmful
- Many support human livelihoods or preferred
quality of life
- Nuisance Species
- Harmful but not necessarily non-native or invasive
6The Invasive Species Problem
As of 2000, almost 5000 nonindigenous species
have established free-living populations in the
U.S.
- Compromise biological integrity - cause
ecological instability upset biodiversity - ?15 have caused severe harm to agriculture,
industry, human health, and environment
- Cost of damages and control estimated at 123
Billion annually (Pimentelle 1999)
7Characteristics of Invasive Species
- High abundance / high fecundity
- Short generation time
- Ability to occupy broad diversity of habitats
wide range of food - High genetic variability
- Proximity to transmittal vector
8Invasive Species Pathways
Transportation Related Pathways Includes all
pathways related to the transportation of people
and goods
- Subcategories include
- Plane, train, car, trucks, buses
- Items Used in Shipping Process (cargo holds,
ballast water, containers, packing material,
baggage, travelers) - Travel/Tourism/Relocation
- Mail/Internet/Overnight Shipping
ISAC 2003
9Invasive Species Pathways
Living Industry (Plant and Animal) Pathways
- Subcategories include
- Food Pathways (market ready for immediate
consumption) - Non-Food Animal Pathways (aquarium trade, pets,
non-food livestock, aquaculture, labs) - Plant Trade (aquatic and terrestrial)
ISAC 2003
10Invasive Species Pathways
Miscellaneous Pathways
- Other aquatic pathways (canals, interbasin
transfers) - Ecosystem disturbance (highways, railways,
pipeline utility ROWs)
- Natural Spread of Established Populations of
Invasive Species
ISAC 2003
11Geographic Source Regions
90
80
70
60
50
Number of Species
40
30
20
10
0
Asia
India
Africa
Pacific
Eurasia
Europe
Atlantic
Australia
Gulf Coast
Unknown
Arctic Ocean
New Zealand
Southern U.S.
South America
Newfoundland
Central America
Mississippi Basin
Various/Widespread
12Introduction Vectors
131810 2007
175 Species Introduced
14Vector - Canals
Dissolved barriers between basins (Interbasin
Migration)
1825 Erie Canal
- Gov. Clinton dumps Lake Erie water into NY Harbor
- Lake Erie-bound boats carried NY Harbor water
- Foreshadowed large-scale future ballast transfers
- Lake trout, walleye, cisco
- Collapse of commercial fishing late-1940s/early-5
0s - 20 Million/year (NYS ISTF 2005)
15Vector Intentional Introductions
- Introduced Ornamental Plants
- Government Sanctioned Sportfish
- Government Agency - Fishery Enhancement
- Government Agency - Fight Insect Pests
16Vector Canals (Solid Ballast)
Plants
- Flowering rush (Butomis umbellatus)
- Weeping alkali grass (Puccinella distans)
- Sedge (Carex flacca)
- Yellow flag (Iris pseudocorus)
- Creeping yellow cress (Rorippa sylvestris)
- European water horewound (Lycopus europaeus)
- European brooklime (Veronica beccabunga)
Invertebrates
- Faucet snail (Bithynia tentaculata)
- European valve snail (Valvata piscinalis)
- European pea clam (Pisidium amnicum)
17Vector Release from Cultivation
Medicinal Plants
- Bittersweet nightshade (Solanum dulcamara)
- Peppermint (Mentha piperita)
- Spearmint (Mentha spicata)
Food Plants
- Watercress (Rorippa nasturtium aquaticum)
Forage Crop
- Redtop (Agrostis gigantea)
Ornamental Plants
- White willow (Salix alba)
- Poison hemlock (Conium maculatum)
- Black alder (Alnus glutinosa)
- Glossy buckthorn (Rhamnus frangula)
- Garden loosestrife (Lysmachia vulgaris)
- True forget-me-not (Myosotis peltatum)
- Bergamot mint (Mentha cintrata)
18Zebra Quagga mussels (Dreissena spp.)
- Direct physical impacts on infrastructure
- Impacts navigation, recreation, angling
- Extirpation/extinction of native species
- 1 - 1.5 Billion since 1988 22 states, 2
provinces (NANSC 2006)
19Purple loosestrife (Lythrum salicaria)
- Highly invasive
- Invades shallow spawning grounds
- Outcompetes native cattails sedges
- Little food value for animals
- Thick stands ? serve as wildlife cover
- 45 Million/year (CRS 1999)
20Common reed (Phragmites australis)
- Highly invasive
- Dominates disturbed landscapes
- Spreads rapidly, displaces natural, diverse plant
communities - Rhizome monocultures 7,000 acres
21Eurasian watermilfoil (Myriophyllum spicatum )
- Highly invasive
- Aggressive competitor
- Reduces biodiversity
- Reduces spawning habitat
- Dense mats impair water uses
22Water chestnut (Trapa natans)
- Collins Lake, NY 1884
- Highly invasive
- Outcompetes natives
- Impenetrable mats
- Severely limits light penetration
- Reduces oxygen levels
- Little value to water fowl
23Bufflegrass (Cenchrus ciliaris)
- Dense thickets, out-competes/displaces native
species - Highly flammable, wildfires kill off native
grasses - Cannot be controlled (cutting/grazing increase
plant growth long roots inhibit digging out
herbicide fire tolerant)
24Asian Long-Horned Beetle
- Wood packing material NY (1996). Chicago (1998)
- Attacks horse chestnut, maples, hardwood trees
- gt Damage than Dutch elm disease, chestnut blight,
gypsy moths
- 13-40 Million/year in NYC and Long Island (NYS
ISTF 2005)
25Mute Swan (Cygnus olor)
- Mid-1800s - early-1900s Eurasia into estates,
parks, zoos - gt 22,000 live in along Atlantic coast Great
Lakes - Feed on submerged aquatic vegetation, reduce food
for natives - Aggressive toward other waterfowl displace
native species - Attack kayakers and canoers
26West Nile Virus (Flavivirus)
- 1999 2001 149 human cases, 18 deaths
- January - October 2002 2977 human cases, 162
deaths
27Chronic Wasting Disease
- Transmissible spongiform encephalopathy
- Attacks brain nervous system of deer and elk
- Similar to mad cow disease
- CO captive mule deer late 1960s - wild elk 1981
- WI wild deer 2002
- NY captive wild deer 2005
28Dutch Elm Disease
- 1930 Nationwide except for desert SW
- Caused by fungus Ophiostoma ulmi
- Transmitted by 2 species of bark beetles
- Destroyed gt half elm trees
- 100 Million/year control costs (Pimentele 1999)
29Swede Midge (Contarinia nasturtii)
- Ontario 1996 - Niagara Co. 2005
- Feeds on cruciferous crops (cabbages,
cauliflower, broccoli, Brussels sprouts,
rutabaga, turnip, radish, horseradish) - Causes severe crop losses (up to 85)
30For More Information
Chuck ONeill Cornell Cooperative Extension - NY
Sea Grant cro4_at_cornell.edu
National Aquatic Nuisance Species
Clearinghouse http//www.aquaticinvaders.org
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