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Download G. Laycock - Wildlife Ecology and Conservation
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It may have begun with Noah, but, wherever it started, the whole idea of rearranging the earth’s wild creatures still seems irresistible. Man, the supreme meddler, has never been quite satisfied with the world as he found it. G. Laycock Translocated Wildlife • Moving species: issues • What makes a species exotic? Invasive? • Why have exotic wildlife been released? • How do exotic and invasive species affect native wildlife? • Why have we failed so often in dealing with exotic species? Translocated Wildlife • How can we control problems associated with exotic species? • What are the pros & cons of wildlife farms and hunting preserves? • Who cares? Translocated Wildlife • Terminology – Native – Indigenous v. nonindigenous – Feral – Exotic – Invasive – Introduced – Reintroduced – Translocated Translocated Wildlife • What has been translocated? (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) Translocated Wildlife • When did translocations start? Translocated Wildlife • Where did they come from? Translocated Wildlife • Where were they moved to? Translocated Wildlife • Exotics in Florida (http://myfwc.com/nonnatives) – 4 amphibians • Giant toad, greenhouse frog, Cuban treefrog – 48 reptiles • Spectacled caiman, Nile monitor, Burmese python – 196 birds • Monk parakeet, starlings, black swan – 20 mammals • Wild hogs, vervet monkey, ferret Many fish, invertebrates, & plants (habitat) • Habitat – Cheatgrass – Fragmites – Purple loosestrife – Hydrilla – Tropical soda apple – Melaluca Translocated Wildlife • How & why were they moved? (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) Translocated Wildlife • Should exotics be introduced in areas where native species already fill a similar niche? (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) Translocated Wildlife • Have we failed as wildlife managers if we must introduce exotic species? Jeff Vanuga, USDA NRCS, www.forestryimages.org Translocated Wildlife • Successful invasions – Wide ranging species, generalists, areas with travelers • Reasons for failure of (re)introductions – Failure to evaluate the characteristics of the species • Weather & climate • Food, cover, water, & space • Competitors, predators, disease, parasites, etc. – – – – Failure to release enough individuals Failure to properly condition animals prior to release Failure to manage the population Failure to understand human dimensions • Pheasants, chuckars, caribou, & wolves Translocated Wildlife • Some regions more vulnerable than others – Islands – Crop monocultures – Heavily altered/disturbed areas William M. Ciesla, Forest Health Management International, www.forestryimages.org Translocated Wildlife • Costs – Ecological • Damage – Wild hogs • Predation – Feral cats, RIFA • Competition Thomas C. Croker, USDA Forest Service, www.forestryimages.org – Sitka & white-tailed deer • Hybridization – Mallards & mottled ducks • Disease & parasites – Parrots • Ecosystem affects – Asian earthworms • Monetary Kenneth M. Gale, www.forestryimages.org • Hundreds of billions in damage and control costs Translocated Wildlife • Wildlife farming & hunting preserves – Costs – Benefits Kenneth M. Gale, www.forestryimages.org Paul Bolstad, www.forestryimages.org Gil Wojciech, www.forestryimages.org Translocated Wildlife • A management tool – Restoration • MVP’s • Genetic diversity (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) – Control/reduction – Can be controversial (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) Large carnivores in Africa (U.S Fish & Wildlife Service) Translocated Wildlife • USDI (1966) guidelines – Research needed – Not in or around national parks or other public land dedicated to native species preservation – Not near rare native species – No exotic grazers on federal land used for domestic grazers – Not in areas where timber production, farming, recreation, or other land uses have primary value – Permits & plans needed for release on federal lands – Private parties will pay for control of exotics spreading on to federal lands – Policy will be reviewed periodically Translocated Wildlife • Executive Order (Carter 1977) – No federal agencies will introduce exotics on their lands – Encourage the prevention of exotic introductions – Restricted federal support for exotic introductions outside of U.S. • Lacey Act Translocated Wildlife • The Florida Administrative Code & the Florida Statutes govern the importation and introduction of nonnative fish and wildlife: – It is unlawful for any person to possess, transport or otherwise bring into the state or to release or introduce in the state any freshwater fish, aquatic invertebrate, marine plant, marine animal, or wild animal life that is not native to the state without a permit from the Commission, except fathead minnow, variable platy, coturnix quail, and ringnecked pheasant. (68-5.001, F.A.C.) Translocated Wildlife • So what!