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Invasive Species September 5th, 2007 Announcements: Check out Case Studies posted on website (if you forgot which group you are in, scroll through to find your name, or ask me) Come prepared for class discussion tomorrow Background Field Trip Questions: now posted Field Trip Waiver Forms: I need you to sign them Field final: will be passed out tomorrow Summary of Monday: • How do communities change? • Succession • Primary vs. Secondary • Who wins at the beginning? Who winds at the end? • Facilitation: biotic/abiotic interactions • Early colonizers vs. Pine vs. Oak • Grasses on sand dunes, eelgrass • Acceleration • Climax communities? • Plant vs.Animal Succession? • Intermediate Disturbance Hypothesis • Role of fire in Chaparral Biome Why study invasive species? • Invasive species are the second greatest threat to conservation of biodiversity • economic consequences (good and bad) • human health consequences Invasive Species Glossary • native: an organism that is living in its home environment Endemic: organism that is only found in/confined to a particular location • • • • exotic non-native foreign/alien • naturalized: a non-native that has become a part of its new environment • invasive: a non-native that has spread to become a dominant member of its new environment originally from a different location weed: an invasive species of plant that causes environmental or economic problems - Noxious weed: legally designated as a pest How do non-native species arrive? • Accidentally • • • seeds parasites unintended cargo Data source: Eurostat. Source of figure: CNT, 2004 • Deliberately • • • • food timber pets biocontrol Data source: US Department of Transportation, 2004 Who are these invaders? • Plants • Animals • Microorganisms What made the green crab successful? What makes an invader successful? • r-strategists • • • grow quickly produce many offspring short generation time good dispersion • generalists: highly adaptable to new conditions • • • • broad geographic range in native environment broad diet It has not coevolved with members of its new environment What makes a community vulnerable to invasion? • human disturbance early succession climate similar to native habitat • absence of predators or pathogens • • •wrong ones for the invader •no predators or pathogens at all - islands What do invasive plants do? Change ecosystem structure • • • • fire suppression/enhancement • • grassland shrubland And vice-versa Change nutrient cycling • Spartina alterniflora Change physical structur of landscape • European beachgrass use up limiting resources, such as water, light • • riparian zone desert woodland kudzu-dominated land Grassland to shrubland Changes fire regime! Shrubland to Grassland Changes fire regime! Woodland to Kudzuland Can you guess its strategy? Riparian zone to desert Local Invaders: Castor Bean, Fennel Pampasgrass, Iceplant… What do invasive animals do? Change foodweb structure • Hyperpredation • drive out native competitors and prey A case study: zebra mussels • • • • • native to Russian lakes introduced to North America in 1985 from bilge of a ship after <1 year, can produce 1,000,000 eggs large colonies clog pipes very efficient filterers • • clear water eliminate native species Zebra mussel range map Microorganisms: virus, fungi, bacteria Invasive Plant and Animal Mutualism + Can an invasive be unwanted at times, and desirable other times? Management Options Do nothing Understand life strategy Vulnerabilities, limiting factor Predict where it will invade, rate of spread, during what time periods…. Remote sensing Mathematical models! ERADICATE! Eradication Physical control Chemical control Thermal control Biological control Predator Virus Grazing www.dailynexus.com Coalition Drops Black Rat Poison on Anacapa Island - Staff Writer Thursday, December 6, 2001 by Rebecca Turek Biological control: lessons from the Outback Cane toads Rabbits 1950’s: myxoma virus 1990’s: Calcivirus Success stories: Schisto. How can we avoid invasive species and preserve biodiversity? “Co-habitable” land use Land uses consistent with biota – Give up the green lawn! – Organic/crop rotation based agriculture (but what is the cost?) Habitat enhancement Variation of landscape Restore disturbance regimes Re-introduction Laws and Regulations Pop Quiz! Which plant/animal would you say is the MOST invasive??? Questions to Ponder: How long do you have to inhabit an area to be a native? What point in time should we restore to? Is fighting invasives a losing battle? What are the costs of doing nothing? Where is biodiversity loss most prominent? Conservation International: Biodiversity Hotspots CI quantified by number of endemic plant species and threat Assessing Biodiversity Indicator species: Species that are present only under strict environmental conditions Can be used to detect healthy/unhealthy ecosystems Example: steelhead, certain diatoms Species diversity/richness: number of species in sample -diversity: number of species within a single habitat type -diversity: difference in species composition between habitats Species evenness: equality of relative abundance Unevenness might indicate unhealthy ecosystem Biodiversity Index Community I II III Robin 0.2 0.3 0.25 Relative Abundance Mallard Crow Cardinal 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.07 0.1 0.5 0.25 0.25 0.25 Geese 0.2 0.03 Shannon-Wiener Biodiversity Index Community Robin 0.2 0.3 0.25 I II III Relative Abundance Mallard Crow Cardinal 0.2 0.2 0.2 0.07 0.1 0.5 0.25 0.25 0.25 H index Geese 0.2 0.03 1.61 1.23 1.39 s H pi log e pi i 1 Where: H = the Shannon-Wiener biodiversity index pi = proportion of each species in the sample (relative abundance) loge = the natural log of pi s = the number of species in the community (species richness) H(Community II) = -(.3*ln(.3)+.07*ln(.07)+.1*ln(.1)+.5*ln(.5)+.03*ln(.03)) How to Protect Biodiversity? Protect Species Endangered Species Act Classic Fisheries Managment Protect Habitat Reserves Conservation Easements Marine Reserves Species Protection Minimum Viable Population (MVP) Inbreeding, genetic drift Genetic bottleneck Minimum Viable Area—habitat protection Most genetic diversity is retained Genetic bottleneck -Population loses much of its genetic diversity from a population decline Which Species to Protect? Umbrella species Flagship species Keystone species Habitat Protection: Reserves One large or many small? Shape? Connectivity? SLOSS Debate: Single Large vs. Several Small Species-area curve Management implications: •Small reserves: area = species •As area increases, diminishing returns To consider: Genetic exchange Extinction events Edge effects Future Pressures Cost/Flexibility Reserves…. Size matters! Shape Matters too! Cores and Buffers: Connectivity: Nodes and Corridors Is connectivity important in MPA’s? Habitat Conservation Management Tools Conceptual diagrams Collaboration (with stakeholders, community) Mathematical/computer models GIS (Geographic Information Systems) Remote sensing Environmental Impact Reports The new trend…… Ecosystem Based Management (EBM) "EBM looks at all the links among living and nonliving resources, rather than considering single issues in isolation . . . Instead of developing a management plan for one issue . . ., EBM focuses on the multiple activities occurring within specific areas that are defined by ecosystem, rather than political, boundaries." US Ocean Commission Report, 2004 http://ebm.nceas.ucsb.edu/faq/definition/