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Objectives

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Objectives Definitions Examples Stages of Invasion Arrival - how? Establishment What characteristics? Spread Why successful? How impact native species? – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Objectives


1
Objectives
  • Definitions
  • Examples
  • Stages of Invasion
  • Arrival - how?
  • Establishment
  • What characteristics?
  • Spread
  • Why successful?
  • How impact native species?
  • Why are some ecosystems more vulnerable?
  • Control and Prevention

2
Definitions
  • Introduced (non-native, exotic)
  • - species introduced deliberately or
    accidentally from
  • somewhere else
  • - more than 10,000 species in USA
  • Domestic/Feral (released pets, livestock and
    game
  • animals)
  • - can spread disease, compete with
    native species
  • Invasive species
  • - species that spread subsequent to
    establishment
  • usually at some cost.

3
Vertebrates House Sparrow
  • Introduced into
  • Brooklyn, New York,
  • in 1851.
  • Competition from the House
  • Sparrow for cavity nests can
  • cause decline of some native
  • species.

4
Insects
  • In 1956, African Honey Bees were imported into
    Brazil
  • Africanized Bees
  • In 1957, 26 African queens escaped
  • Reached US in 1990
  • More aggressive than European Honey Bees
  • have killed 1,000 people
  • Impact honey and pollination industries

5
  • Asian Long-horned Beetle
  • attacks and kills many native trees

Found in Chicago in 1998
6
  • Gypsy moth
  • Introduced in 1860s
  • Originally brought to the US for silk production
  • now defoliates entire forests

7
Plants
Kudzu
  • Introduced to U.S. in 1876 at the Philadelphia
    Centennial Exposition
  • promoted as a forage
  • crop and ornamental
  • plant until 1953
  • kills other plants by
  • smothering them
  • under a solid blanket
  • of leaves

8
Reptiles and Amphibians
Cane toad native to Central and South America
  • Introduced world-wide to
  • control insects (Australia)
  • milky secretions are
  • highly toxic. Kill dogs,
  • cats and small native
  • animals.

9
Python Explodes After Eating Alligator October 5,
2005 MIAMI, (AP) Alligators have clashed with
nonnative pythons before in Everglades National
Park. But when a 6-foot gator tangled with a
13-foot python recently, the result wasnt
pretty. The snake apparently tried to swallow the
gator whole and then exploded. The gators
have had to share their territory with a python
population that has swelled over the past 20
years after owners dropped off pythons they no
longer wanted in the Everglades. The Asian snakes
have thrived in the wet, hot climate.
10
Gastropods ZEBRA MUSSEL - Dreissena polymorpha
  • Found in 1988 in Lake St. Clair (Lake between
    Huron and
  • Erie, just off of Detroit, MI).
  • Up to 70,000 individuals per m2
  • Likely came to North America
  • in ballast water


11
  • One of the most expensive exotic species
  • Restricts the flow of water through intake
    pipes
  • (drinking, cooling, processing and irrigating
    water)
  • Attaches to boat hulls, docks, locks,
    breakwaters
  • and navigation aids, increasing maintenance
    costs
  • and impeding waterborne transport.

12
Stages of invasion
1. Arrival
2. Establishment
3. Spread
13
1. ARRIVAL
  • Introduced deliberately
  • naturalization societies
  • Shakespeare fans
  • game animals
  • domestic animals
  • Accidentally
  • ballasts of ships
  • unprocessed wood
  • fruit shipments
  • by-pass natural barriers

14
1. Arrival Vectors of invasion into ecosystems
  • A. Intentional Release of Target Species
  • Plants for Agriculture
  • Plants for Forestry
  • Plants for Soil Improvements
  • - fire suppression, erosion control
  • Ornamental Plants
  • Birds and Mammals for Hunting
  • Biological Control
  • Released Pets and Pet Trade

15
1. ArrivalVectors of invasion into ecosystems
  • Release of Non-Target Species (Accidental
    Releases)
  • Contaminants or Hitchhikers with Produce
  • Contaminants or Hitchhikers with Ornamental
    Plants
  • Contaminants or Hitchhikers with Aquaculture
  • Timber
  • Contaminants of Seed Stock
  • Cars
  • Planes
  • Hitchhikers with Packing Material, Cargo
  • Ballast in ships
  • Ship Hull Fouling
  • Tourists, Luggage
  • Canals

16
Ballast Tanks
17
1. Arrival Pathogens and Disease
Forecast and control of epidemics in a
globalized world. Hufnagel et al. PNAS 2004
18
2. Establishment Characteristics of invasive
species
  • general diet and habitat requirements
  • high abundance
  • small body size
  • high reproductive potential (r-strategy)
  • good competitors
  • social / gregarious
  • (different characteristics may be important at
  • different stages)

Generalities would be nice! Make invasion biology
a predictive science.
19
  • Spread Hypotheses for the success
  • of introduced species
  • Escape from natural enemies
  • predators, parasites, disease
  • Increased competitive ability
  • outcompete native species
  • Pre-adapted to disturbed environments

20
3. Spread How do they impact native species?
  • Can be predators, competitors, parasites,
    diseases.
  • Can modify habitat.
  • Can promote spread of other invaders.
  • Ultimatelydisplace native species

21
  • Percentage of threatened or endangered
  • species imperiled by
  • Habitat degradation and loss - 85
  • Invasive species - 49
  • Pollution - 24
  • Overexploitation - 17
  • Disease - 3

Source Wilcove et al.1998 BioScience
22
The Invasive Argentine ant
23
3. Spread Invasive replaces native through time

24
  • Phrynosoma coronatum
  • Declining throughout
  • its range.
  • A sit and wait ant
  • specialist.
  • Doesnt eat Argentine ant.

25
  • Mechanisms responsible for invasion success
  • in Argentine ants
  • Escape from natural enemies
  • predators and parasites.
  • Pre-adapted to disturbed environments.
  • Different competitive environment -
  • competitive release.
  • Increased competitive ability - increased
    density.

26
Displacement or replacement?
  • Homogenization
  • Process by which a mixture is made uniform
    throughout.
  • Biotic homogenization
  • Increasing similarity in species among areas.
  • Habitat loss and modification coupled with the
  • widespread introduction of a few species leads
  • to homogenization.

27
3. Spread What makes certain ecosystems
vulnerable?
  • Diverse, undisturbed ecosystems have few
    invaders
  • Biotic resistance
  • Disturbed habitats have more invaders
  • Human residential areas
  • many European species that are commensal
  • with humans
  • Islands little history with competitors,
    predators,
  • parasites, or diseases

28
Over 2,000 species of birds have gone extinct on
islands as a result of habitat loss and the
introduction of predators and parasites.
Hawaii Habitat loss, malaria, rats and mongoose
29
Birds on islands (from Case 1996 Biol Con)
30
Estimated annual costs associated with non-native
species Group costs (in
millions) Plants (purple loosestrife, weeds)
34,000 Mammals (feral pigs, rats)
37,000 Birds (pigeons, starlings)
2,000 Fishes
1,000 Arthropods (ants, termites, other pests)
19,000 Mollusks (zebra mussel, asian
clam) 1,200 Microbes (plant
pathogens, animal disease) 41,000 All
organisms over 136 billion per year
Source Pimentel et al. 2000 BioScience
31
How do we control invasive species?
  • In urban and agricultural areas
    pesticide/herbicide use still common
  • Natural enemies - Biological Control
  • Manage the landscape to minimize disturbance

32
Results of pesticide use
  • Killed native competitors
  • May select for resistance
  • Health risks for people

33
  • Biological Control
  • The use of one species to control another.
  • Usually a specialist predator or
  • parasite of an invasive species.
  • Needs to be species-specific or can cause
  • even worse problems.

34
Prevention
  • Education is key
  • Research is still needed - generalities?
  • Monitoring programs - early detection
  • Prevent establishment - quarantine
  • Increased communication among agencies
  • Increase regulations

35
How can you stop the spread of exotics?
http//www.invasivespeciesinfo.gov/
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