Title: NATIVE species
1(No Transcript)
2- NATIVE species
-
- Species that have evolved in a specific area
over a period of time, have no evidence of human
introduction, and are part of the natural
biodiversity of the place. - INTRODUCED species
-
- Non-native species that have been intentionally
or unintentionally brought into an area by
humans.
3- INTRODUCED species
- INVASIVE species
- An introduced species that can alter the natural
ecology and can spread widely
4 Invasions are increasing in frequency
N298
Ruiz et al. 2000
5- Routes of Introduction
- Direct introduction
- Arrive with cultured oysters
-
- International shipping
- Ballast water, ship fouling
- Intraregional transport
- Stepping stone
-
6 7How do introduced species become invasive?
- Succession Hypotheses
- Characteristics of invaders
- Unused resources
- Unfilled niches
- Disturbance/ecosystem instability
- Enemy release hypothesis
- No enemies pathogens, parasites, and predators
-
http//www.cdfa.ca.gov/
Purple Loosestrife
8- Why do we care?
- Loss of habitat greatest threat to biodiversity.
- Second biological invasion
-
- The cost of invasive species
- Environmental
- e.g. species extinction, habitat loss,
biodiversity loss, etc - Economic
- e.g. toxic weeds, agriculture pests, low farm
production, less tourism/recreational revenue,
etc - Human health
- e.g. non-indigenous pathogens and hosts
9Elkhorn Slough (ES)
Native
Lined Shore Crabs Pachygrapsus crassipes
California Horn Snail Cerithidea californica
Invasive
Introduced ---
www.elkhornslough.org
Benthic Lab, MLML
Australian tubeworm Ficopomatus enigmaticus
Orange Sponge Hymeniacidon sinapium
www.elkhornslough.org
www.elkhornslough.org
Japanese Mud Snail Batillaria attramentaria
European Green Crab Carcinus maenas
10A Tale of Two Snails
Japanese Mud Snail Batillaria attramentaria
California Horn Snail Cerithidea californica
NATIVE snails
INTRODUCED snails
11HOW DO WE DETERMINE WHAT SPECIES OF SNAIL WE
HAVE?
- MORPHOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES
- DIFFERENCES IN DNA
12USING DNA TO DIFFERENTIATE SPECIES
- DIFFERENT SPECIES HAVE DIFFERENT NUCLEOTIDE
SEQUENCES IN THEIR DNA DUE TO MUTATIONS OVER TIME
13HOW DO WE EASILY COMPARE DNA SEQUENCES?
- GEL ELECTROPHORESIS
- LOOK IN A DNA DATABASE
14GEL ELECTROPHORESIS
- ISOLATE DNA FROM YOUR SAMPLE
- USE RESTRICTION ENZYME TO CUT DNA INTO DIFFERENT
SIZED PIECES - RUN A GEL TO VISUALIZE DNA FRAGMENTS
15RESTRICTION ENZYMES
- Restriction enzyme
- A protein that recognizes a particular sequence
of DNA and cuts the DNA there (the restriction
site) - Digestion
- the act of breaking down into pieces
16Different enzymesdifferent sitesdifferent cuts
Eco RI
Sma I
Pst I
- http//www.biotechnologyonline.gov.au/popups/ani_c
utting.cfm
17VIRTUAL GEL ELECTROPHORESIS
- GACAATCGTATGCGGGACTGTGTTTTTCTTGGTACAACTGCGGGAATATT
ATTGAAACTCCTACACTATTGCAGATAGGGTTTATGGCAGGGTTTTCTAA
TTACTAACTGGATTCCATGGGATACATGTCGTCGTAGGGACTATTTGGCT
AATTGGTAAGGTTAGTTCGACTATGACGCGGGGAGTTTTCTAGTCAACGA
CATTTCGGGTTTGAGGCTTGTATTTGGTACTGACAATTTTGTAGATGTGG
TGTGAGTGGCATTGTGGTGCTTAGTGTACGTGTGGTTTGGAGGATGATTA
TATATGTGATGGTTTAAGATATGGGATGGGGATGTTTACACATTTAAGT - http//tools.neb.com/NEBcutter2/index.php
18BLAST
- LIKE A GOOGLE SEARCH
- DNA DATABASE
- USED TO CONFIRM SPECIES ID
- http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/
19SO
- BASED ON GEL ELECTROPHORESIS AND BLAST RESULTS,
WE CAN CONCLUDE.. - THESE SNAILS ARE ALL BATTILARIA (THE JAPANESE
INVADER)
20Case Study Batillaria attramentaria
- Introduced to ES in 1929 with oyster culture
- Supplement S2 ES history Oyster Farming
- ES has the highest density, estimated up to
10,000/m2 (Byers 1999)
21Case Study B. attramentaria
- Areas along the Pacific
- Coast of North
- America where
- Batillaria are present,
- Cerithidea are present,
- Both are present or
- Both are absent
- (Byers 1999)
- Currently, there is no Cerithidea in Elkhorn
Slough, but it was found in 1850 and 1857. - Maximum coexistence was predicted to be 35 years
(Byers 1999).
22Case Study B. attramentaria
- This exotic species can out-compete the native
California Horn snail, C. californica, due to - its efficiency in converting resources to growth
- higher dispersal rates
- better tolerance to hypoxia
- lighter parasite loads
- (Byers 2000 a-c)
- Supplement S3 C. californica vs. B.
attramentaria in SFB
Succession hypothesis
Predator release hypothesis
23A Tale of Two Snails
- Common traits
- Live in the mud flats, salt marshes
- Feed on epipelic/benthic diatoms
- Have parasitic trematodes
What are the similarities and differences between
these two snails?
24Part 1 Observations and Hypotheses
- In 2004 and 2005 students in the Marine Ecology
class at Moss Landing Marine Laboratories carried
out studies focused on the Batillaria in Elkhorn
Slough - Data from these projects has been adapted for the
lab and field project
25Part 1 Observations and Hypotheses
- Objective
- Density of and Parasite Prevalence in the
Invasive Japanese Mud Snails, Batillaria
attramentaria, in Elkhorn Slough.
26Paulas Graph For Percent Infected In The Elkhorn
Slough