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Wildland Impacts of Invasive Wildlife Natalie B. Gates, D.V.M. Wildlife Biologist National Park Service Point Reyes National Seashore Wildland Impacts of Invasive Wildlife Definitions What we know about invasive wildlife Case studies in Marin Future considerations Definitions non-native species introduced species exotic species non-indigenous species alien species transplants species of plants and animals that are not native (natural) to an area species that did not evolve with the ecosystem in which they are found the result of deliberate or accidental human activities Definitions invasive species species whose introduction causes or is likely to cause economic or environmental harm or harm to human health non-native species whose introduction and/or spread threatens biological diversity agents of change Definitions All invasive species are non-native. Not all non-native species are invasive. What we know about invasive wildlife The impacts of alien invasive species are immense, insidious, and usually irreversible. They may be as damaging to native species and ecosystems on a global scale as the loss and degradation of habitats. (World Conservation Union, IUCN) What we know about invasive wildlife Hundreds of extinctions have been caused by alien invasives. (IUCN) What we know about invasive wildlife In the past 40 years, the rate of biotic invasion has increased enormously because of human population growth, rapid movement of people, and alteration of the environment. What we know about invasive wildlife Most vertebrate invaders have a close association with humans, as well as high abundance in their native range, broad diet, short generation times, ability of females to colonize alone, and ability to function in a wide range of physical conditions. (Ehrlich 1989) Case studies in Marin (Not a complete cataloguing of all invasive wildlife species in Marin) Not discussed: Non-Native Bees Bullfrogs Brown-headed Cowbirds Starlings Rock Pigeons English Sparrows Black Rats House Mice Introduced Game Fish Virginia Opossum ETC…… Case studies in Marin – mosquitofish native to S. America distributed by many mosquito control programs / homeowners some introductions to natural areas are inadvertent (flooding, overflow) mosquitofish have become established in Marin’s perennial streams/ponds impacts in California: prey heavily on frog eggs, treefrog tadpoles (Goodsell and Kats 1999) prey on California newts (Gamradt and Kats 1996) even when high densities of mosquito larvae were presented as alternative prey thought to be cause of declining frog numbers in Australia (Webb and Joss 1997) Case studies in Marin – wild turkeys native to U.S. east of the Rocky Mountains Rio Grande subspecies introduced for hunting to Marin in 1970s – populations increasing broods of 10-12 poults -population should be capable of a five-fold increase in years with abundant food (Barrett & Kucera 2005) heavy use of oak mast at PORE impacts in Marin/Sonoma: (Gluesenkamp, in press) ↑ soil disturbance ↑ acorn removal ↓ invertebrates (crickets,spiders,ants) Case studies in Marin – wild turkeys Case studies in Marin – cats cats arrived in N.A. with first colonists > 60 million in N.A (Nassar & Mosier 1991) 50 million feral cats (PAWS 1997) diet (outdoor access) = mammals, birds, reptiles rural areas: approx. 60% of households have cats (Ogan and Jurek 1997) Case studies in Marin – cats in VA and WI each feral cat killed approx. 5 birds/year (Luoma 1997 ) pet cats kill a similar number of birds as feral cats (McKay 1996) 1996 465 million birds are killed by cats per year impacts in EBRParks: (Hawkins, 1998): ↓ birds (50%) ↓ native mice, ↑nonnative mice Case studies in Marin – wild pigs NPS R. Saulino feral pigs, wild boar and hybrids native to Eurasia and N. Africa use oak mast heavily populations can increase rapidly with 2 farrowings/year and 4-7 piglets/litter Marin introduction 1975-1978. peak 1984 - last confirmed Marin sighting 1994 Impacts in California: damage tree seedlings and limit tree regeneration (Sweitzer &Van Vuren 2002) enhance spread of invasive weeds (Kotanen 1995) compete with native species for food resources (Gomez et al. 2003) 2-3 X ↑ erosion (MMWD 1987) Case studies in Marin – wild pigs Case studies in Marin – European fallow deer native to N. Africa and Asia Minor introduced to West Marin for hunting in the 1940s and 1950s Impacts (Marin): dietary overlap with native species (Elliott 1983) carry diseases known to affect native deer (Riemann et al 1976) denudation of woodlands and riparian areas (Fellers & Osbourn 2006) (Bildfell et al 2004) Case studies in Marin – European fallow deer Future considerations Future considerations – invasional meltdown some initially benign introductions may occasionally turn into damaging invasions positive interactions among the hundreds of introduced species green crabs in CA selectively prey on native clams, causing an increase in non-native clams (previously suppressed by competition) (Grosholtz 2005*) crazy ants extirpate the native red land crab on Pacific islands eventually leading to leading to canopy dieback and even deaths of canopy trees (O’Dowd et al 2003) Future considerations – climate change Expected CA changes: Characteristics of good invaders may favor them in changing times altered fire regimes flooding prolonged drought cycles altered vegetation broad diet short generation times ability of females to colonize alone ability to function in a wide range of physical conditions "Some exotic species that now are not quite invasive could be pushed over that threshold to become invasive simply because they're able to keep up with the climate." (Weis, UC Irvine* Irvine ) Future considerations - Sudden Oak Death Tanoaks Important for: Birds Rodents (woodrats) Deer (USDA/USFS) (Horton & Wright 1944) Future considerations – human population ↑ risk new introductions reduced, fragmented habitat ↑ demand for water and recreation