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NATIVE species

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Arrive with cultured oysters. International shipping. Ballast ... Introduced to ES in 1929 with oyster culture. Supplement: S2 'ES history: Oyster Farming' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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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
  • Routes of Introduction

7
How 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

9
Elkhorn 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
10
A Tale of Two Snails
Japanese Mud Snail Batillaria attramentaria
California Horn Snail Cerithidea californica
NATIVE snails
INTRODUCED snails

11
HOW DO WE DETERMINE WHAT SPECIES OF SNAIL WE
HAVE?
  • MORPHOLOGICAL DIFFERENCES
  • DIFFERENCES IN DNA

12
USING DNA TO DIFFERENTIATE SPECIES
  • DIFFERENT SPECIES HAVE DIFFERENT NUCLEOTIDE
    SEQUENCES IN THEIR DNA DUE TO MUTATIONS OVER TIME

13
HOW DO WE EASILY COMPARE DNA SEQUENCES?
  • GEL ELECTROPHORESIS
  • LOOK IN A DNA DATABASE

14
GEL ELECTROPHORESIS
  • ISOLATE DNA FROM YOUR SAMPLE
  • USE RESTRICTION ENZYME TO CUT DNA INTO DIFFERENT
    SIZED PIECES
  • RUN A GEL TO VISUALIZE DNA FRAGMENTS

15
RESTRICTION 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

16
Different enzymesdifferent sitesdifferent cuts
Eco RI
Sma I
Pst I
  • http//www.biotechnologyonline.gov.au/popups/ani_c
    utting.cfm

17
VIRTUAL GEL ELECTROPHORESIS
  • GACAATCGTATGCGGGACTGTGTTTTTCTTGGTACAACTGCGGGAATATT
    ATTGAAACTCCTACACTATTGCAGATAGGGTTTATGGCAGGGTTTTCTAA
    TTACTAACTGGATTCCATGGGATACATGTCGTCGTAGGGACTATTTGGCT
    AATTGGTAAGGTTAGTTCGACTATGACGCGGGGAGTTTTCTAGTCAACGA
    CATTTCGGGTTTGAGGCTTGTATTTGGTACTGACAATTTTGTAGATGTGG
    TGTGAGTGGCATTGTGGTGCTTAGTGTACGTGTGGTTTGGAGGATGATTA
    TATATGTGATGGTTTAAGATATGGGATGGGGATGTTTACACATTTAAGT
  • http//tools.neb.com/NEBcutter2/index.php

18
BLAST
  • LIKE A GOOGLE SEARCH
  • DNA DATABASE
  • USED TO CONFIRM SPECIES ID
  • http//www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/BLAST/

19
SO
  • BASED ON GEL ELECTROPHORESIS AND BLAST RESULTS,
    WE CAN CONCLUDE..
  • THESE SNAILS ARE ALL BATTILARIA (THE JAPANESE
    INVADER)

20
Case 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)

21
Case 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).

22
Case 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
23
A 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?

24
Part 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


25
Part 1 Observations and Hypotheses
  • Objective
  • Density of and Parasite Prevalence in the
    Invasive Japanese Mud Snails, Batillaria
    attramentaria, in Elkhorn Slough.

26
Paulas Graph For Percent Infected In The Elkhorn
Slough
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