Title: Invasive species: the worst case?
1Invasive species the worst case?
Benthic fauna 97 by number exotic 99 by
biomass exotic
2Biological invasions (Lec16)
- Impacts
- Which species invade?
- Which communities are invaded?
- Readings
- Invasional meltdown hypothesis
- Management - Biological Control (Lec17)
3SOME DEFINITIONS Indigenous/native species - a
spp found within its native range Non-indigenous/i
ntroduced species - a spp introduced to areas
beyond its native range by human
activity Established - a spp with a
self-sustaining population outside its native
range Invasive species - a non-indigenous spp
that spreads from the point of introduction and
becomes abundant Non-invasive species - a
non-indigenous spp that remains localised within
its new environment
4Introduced species are common
Pine trees in Africa
African dung beetles in Australia
Australian Possum in New Zealand
New Zealand snails in North America
5What proportion of species in BC are introduced?
VASCULAR PLANTS 21FRESHWATER
FISH 15MAMMALS 8REPTILES 27 AMPHIBIANS 10
6How serious is the problem in BC?
Most major agricultural pests eg apple clearwing
moth 50 of weeds BC lists 47 noxious
weeds. eg yellow starthistle Japanese
knotweed Check out E Flora BC Invasive species
Page
7What are the impacts of invasions? Economic
cows, potatoes, oysters - zebra mussel, gypsy
moth, purple loosestrife Public health -
malaria - cholera pandemic
- avian flu? Biodiversity - impacts on
SAR 25 endangered species 31 threatened
species 16 special concern species
COSEWIC
8IMPACTS OF INTRODUCED SPECIES
1. PREDATION
Nile Perch - - introduced to Lake Victoria in
1980 - caused extinction of many endemic
cichlid fish
Seehausen et al 1997 Cons Biol 11890-904
9IMPACTS OF INTRODUCED SPECIES
1. PREDATION
Red Fox - introduced in 1855 - linked to
declines of ground nesting birds, many small
mammals, turtles
Removal and rock wallabies in WA
101. PREDATION - the rosy wolfsnail Euglandina
The introduced predator from se USA Introduced to
Hawaii, Society Islands, Mascarene Islands,
Seychelles
11IMPACTS OF INTRODUCED SPECIES
2. COMPETITION
Zebra mussel First found in Great Lakes in
1988 Small - 2.5 cm long High densities -
15000/m2
Unionid mussels - 297 endemics 40-75 spp
extirpated or of special concern gt60 cases due
to zebra mussels
12IMPACTS OF INTRODUCED SPECIES
2. COMPETITION - Himalayan balsam
Introduced to Europe 100 yrs ago Nectar
produced at very high rate Bumblebees visit 4X
more frequently
13IMPACTS OF INTRODUCED SPECIES
2. COMPETITION - Himalayan balsam
Competes with natives for services of pollinators
14IMPACTS OF INTRODUCED SPECIES
3. GENETIC - california tiger salamander
Native declining Congener used as
bait Released Genetic study - 6 ponds - all had
hybrids - no pure individuals in 50
15IMPACTS OF INTRODUCED SPECIES
3. GENETIC - the introduced mallard
threatens
Endemic florida mottled duck
Endemic Hawaiian Duck
NZ Grey duck
16IMPACTS OF INTRODUCED SPECIES
4. HABITAT ALTERATION -
Beaver 1946 - 50 to Argentina 2006 - 115,000
Dominant tree spp - all Nothofagus Regeneration
dependant on seedlings Beaver limit
regeneration, deforest riparian habitat
17IMPACTS OF INTRODUCED SPECIES
5. HABITAT ALTERATION - Yellowstone NP
New Zealand snail 1994 - introduced 2006 -
20K-500K /m2
Impact - consumes 75 GNP of the system - is
97 of primary consumer biomass - produces
2.5X total animal waste in control stream
- increases nutrient cycling - on native
spp. unknown
18IMPACTS OF INTRODUCED SPECIES
CAN BE NEGLIGIBLE
European cranefly 1960s pest in Vancouver 2006 -
non-pest status
Crested mynah Introduced Became common in sw
BC Now extinct
19INVASIONS - a sequence of unfortunate events
Species imported into new area
Fails in transport
Survives transport and introduction
Fails to establish
Establishment
Spread
Noninvasive
Invasive
20- Filters apply at each stage
- Biogeographic - physical barriers
- Physiological - match between species and
climate - Biotic - Interaction with native species
21KEY QUESTIONS What features of the invading
species predict establishment and
expansion? What characteristics of a community
favour invasions? Why do species have a large
impact?
22What features of the invading species predict
establishment and expansion?
Your Predictions
23What features of the invading species predict
Establishment and invasion success (expansion)?
Mammalian introductions into Australia 40 spp 30
genera 14 families
24What features of the invading species predict
Establishment?
Mammalian introductions into Australia Establishm
ent - 23 of 40 spp became established
Numbers of individuals released Location -
greater area of climatically suitable
habitat Species - larger overseas range size
Expansion Number of introductions Location -
greater area of climatically suitable
habitat Species - body size (smaller) -
lifespan (shorter) - fecundity (higher) -
diet (CarnivoregtOmnivore or herbivore)
25What characteristics of a community favour
invasions?
- Predictions
- The habitat is hospitable
- There is niche space available
- so species-rich communities are less vulnerable
- the biotic resistance hypothesis
- Elton (1958) and
disturbed communities are more vulnerable - Q. Explain why?
26Invasions in streamside tussock communities
Natural data Exptal data
Q. Does this support the biotic resistance
hypothesis?
27Plant invasions in S African reserves
Q. What does this suggest?
28Which communities are most vulnerable?
Hospitable habitats Resource rich systems -
combining biotic resistancedisturbance
Fig 9.14
29Why do species have a large impact?
High impact invaders Can be plants, animals or
microbes Act as predators, herbivores,
parasites/disease
But are often Keystone predators Ecosystem
engineers Filling an empty niche
30CONCLUSIONS Species invasions Are Common But
impacts vary from negligible to
severe Establishment increases with numbers
released Invasiveness (pests/weeds) is hard to
predict Risk varies with species-richness,
resource availability and disturbance What can
you do? See E Flora BC Invasives page NEXT -
management and biological control