Title: Invasive Species
1Invasive Species the Hudson
Photo by Kara Goodwin
2Activity
Which of these photos shows an invasive species?
How do you know?
3Definitions
- An alien species is one that was moved outside of
its native range by human activities - Usually applied only to species established in
the wild (doesnt include wheat or chickens) - Also called exotic, non-native, non-indigenous,
introduced, or invasive species - Invasive is used to designate aggressive alien
species - An alien species whose introduction does or is
likely to cause economic or environmental harm or
harm to human health.
4Why worry about invasive species?
- Can change habitats or alter ecosystem function
and ecosystem services - Can crowd out or replace native species
- Can damage human activities (agriculture,
forestry, fisheries) - 137 billion/ year in damages and pest control
costs (Pimentel, 2000)
5Disease
Examples -wooly hemlock adelgid -beech bark
disease -Asian chestnut blight
www.dnr.gov
6Predators
Example Brown Tree Snake
- Native to South Pacific
- Stowaway in ship cargo, 1950
- Eats small vertebrates and bird eggs (10 of 11
native forest-dwelling bird species extirpated 5
extinct) - 40 snakes/acre
Source www.birdlife.org
7Predators
- Example Nile Perch
- -introduced as food
- to Lake Victoria
- -eliminated over
- 100 species of native
- Cichlid fish
Source russelure.com/photos/
8Predators Goats
9Competition Habitat Alteration
Example from the Hudson River
Zebra mussel (invasive) Pearly mussel
(native)
10Competition Mile a Minute
www.plants.usda.gov
www.rutgers.edu
11Competition Mile a Minute
- Grows up to 6 inches per day
- Native to Asia, brought over by mistake in
ornamental plants in the 1930s - Takes over open spaces, grows over existing
vegetation - Spikes on the vines make it difficult to remove
12Pop Quiz
- How many alien species are in the Hudson River?
- a. 05
- b. 5 25
- c. 25 100
- d. 100 150
- e. More than 150
13More than 100 species, including many of our most
familiar plants and animals
14Pop Quiz
- How many alien species arrive in the Hudson River
each decade? - a. 1-2
- b. 3-5
- c. 6-10
- d. More than 10
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16Pop Quiz
- What invasive species arrived in the Hudson River
watershed in 2008? - Asian clam
- Northern snakehead
- Chinese mitten crab
- All of the above
17Chinese mitten crab
Mound of crabs trying to get over a dam in Germany
18Northern snakehead
Asian clam (Corbicula)
19Pop Quiz
- Are more alien plants or animals currently
arriving in the Hudson River estuary? - Plants
- Animals
- Dont know
20Aliens began to arrive a long time ago and are
still coming
Mills, et al 1996
21The aliens came from all over the world
- Canals
- Shipping
- Agriculture
- Stocking
Mills, et al 1996
22Major Hudson River Invaders
Water Chestnut Common Reed Zebra Mussels
23Water Chestnut, Trapa natans
- Native to Eurasia
- Deliberately introduced by botanists
- Collins Lake, Schenectady 1884
- 1920s Mohawk River
- Hudson River 1930s
- Grows in quiet waters
Photo C. Harris
24Water Chestnut, Trapa natans
- Floating leaves, air bladders
- Found on surface
- Blocks lights
- Spiny nuts
25Inbocht Bay, south of Catskill on the Hudson River
Photos courtesy of H. Malcom
26Inbocht Bay
1995
1997
2002
27Native submerged plant in the Hudson Water
celery Vallisneria americana
28Why does the dissolved oxygen change so much?
Caraco et.al., 2006
29Common reed
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33Percentage of the most common 11 marsh dependant
bird species surveyed at each marsh in 2005
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36What are these critters good at?
37Zebra Mussel Life Cycle
38http//www.dgif.state.va.us/zebramussels/
www.zeestop.com
39A map showing the distribution of zebra mussels
and quagga mussels, another invasive. (USGS,
2007. Zebra Mussel Information U.S. Distribution
Maps, http//nas.er.usgs.gov/zebra.mussel/).
40Native Mussels Clams Have Declined
41Phytoplankton have declined
42Ecological Effects
INCREASE
DECREASE
43- Abundance is mean riverwide number of fish over
standard period of time - Distribution is ratio of number of fish above
RKM 100 (Newburgh) and number of fish below RKM
100 for each species - Growth is apparent growth, based on field
measurements of length - Covariates include year (time-trends), freshwater
flow, water temperature - Technique is multiple regression, using
model-averaging
44Controlling Invasive Species
- Often not possible, significant costs
- National Invasive Species Act of 1996
- For the Hudson River and Great Lakes only
- Ballast water must be treated, retained, or
released in ocean
-Inspection of goods at customs -Global shipping
is a problem