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Invasive species also called exotic species, bioinvaders

In their native country these organisms are not 'pests', i.e., (organisms that dominate ecosystems), because they are kept to lower population numbers by such factors as:predatorsdiseasesother ecosystem interactions (e.g., competition).. We expect that the effect of the transport of organisms all

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Invasive species also called exotic species, bioinvaders

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    1. Invasive species (also called exotic species, bioinvaders)

    2. In their native country these organisms are not 'pests', i.e., (organisms that dominate ecosystems), because they are kept to lower population numbers by such factors as: predators diseases other ecosystem interactions (e.g., competition).

    3. We expect that the effect of the transport of organisms all over the world by humans will be a decrease in global diversity. Such transport results in effective presence of one genepool the world over, similar to the effect of having all land on the earth combined within one continent. This would mean that all species in the world would have to compete with all other species in the same niche. In the world as we know it, there are very different animals/plants occupying the same niche in different continents.

    4. For instance, kangaroos fill the niche 'large land herbivore' in Australia, which niche is filled by antelopes, zebras and the like in Africa, by bisons in America. Similarly, North and South America had independently evolved mammalian faunas, and when these lands were connected about 3-2 million years ago by the formation of the isthmus of Panama, the connection was followed by 'The Great American Interchange'. The overall diversity in the combined continents decreased, when some animals moved from South to North (e.g., opossum), many moved from North to South (e.g. jaguars).

    5. Definition of Invasive species Plants, animals, and microbes not native to a region which, when introduced either accidentally or intentionally, out-compete native species for available resources, reproduce prolifically, and dominate regions and ecosystems. Because they often arrive in new areas unaccompanied by their native predators, invasive species can be difficult to control. Left unchecked, many invasives have the potential to transform entire ecosystems, as native species and those that depend on them for food, shelter, and habitat, disappear.

    6. Invasive species: how serious a problem are they? Estimate: costs of invasive species in the United States app. $125-140 billion each year. Estimate: 25% of US agriculture gross national product lost to foreign pests? Nearly half of the species listed as threatened or endangered under the Endangered Species Act are at risk due to competition with or predation by non-native species.

    7. Purple loosestrife, a highly aggressive plant invader of wetlands, can produce up to 2.7 million seeds per plant yearly, and spreads across approximately 480,000 additional hectares of wetlands each year. Ecosystem upset, since local fauna does not eat the plant

    8. The brown tree snake, an invasive originating in the South Pacific and Australia, has extirpated 10 of 13 native bird species, 6 of 12 native lizard species, and 2 of 3 bat species on the island of Guam.

    9. The glassy-winged sharpshooter arrived in California, carries a plant bacterium Xylella fastidiosa, which causes a disease that poses a major threat to grape, raisin, and wine industries, and the tourism associated with them, collectively valued at nearly $35 billion annually.

    10. Euphorbia esula (Leafy Spurge) is a plant that rapidly covers huge areas of rangeland in the American west, doing damage to both livestock and wild fauna, because it does not offer nutritious food to herbivores.

    11. Kudzu vine, introduced as a fast-growing vine to help prevent soil erosion, has become a major pest in the southern US.

    12. Zebra mussels (Dreissena polymorpha) are fingernail-sized, fresh water mussels native to the Caspian Sea/Black Sea region of Asia. They are believed to have been transported to the Great Lakes via ballast water from a trans-oceanic vessel. The ballast water, taken on in a fresh water European port was subsequently discharged into Lake St. Clair, near Detroit, where the mussel was discovered in 1988. They are now down to the Gulf of Mexico, and made it into Connecticut as well. They are major pests, covering large areas of lakes and rivers, preventing the establishment of other species, cover water intakes and clog pipes.

    13. Pacific Islands (including Hawaii) had hundreds of species of snail which occurred only on these islands (endemic species). The right-hand picture shows a Hawaiian species of Achatinella; there were about 42 species of this genus present on the island of Oahu.

    14. The giant African land snail (Achatina fulica) was introduced in many islands, with some idea of eating it, but the giant snails escaped and rapidly started to eat the local snails. Then a second snail-eating snail species was introduced: Euglandina rosea (middle picture; the rosy wolf snail), native in Florida-middle America. This species can eat the giant African snail, but turned out to eat the local, endemic species much faster than it ever ate any African snails. On Hawaii, 71% of endemic species are now extinct. On Tahiti and Moorea many species of the endemic snail Partula are extinct, but a handful (from the 64 species of Partula originally present on Tahiti) are still hanging on.

    15. What are the Ecological Impacts on invasive species? Simply, competition with local species. On many islands there were species of ground-breeding birds and non-flying birds (e.g., Dodo), that were not accustomed to the presence of predators: these did not exist on these islands. In other places, straight competition for resources has an impact: a Florida wasp became extinct a few years after a southeast Asian wasp became established. Unfortunately, the native Florida wasp was important in local pest control and ate noxious insects, whereas the imported wasp was not.

    16. Change to ecosystems, in which even a whole food web can change. The European Periwinkle snail was introduced in Nova Scotia around 1840, and ate its way south along the coast, grazing algae from the rocks in the intertidal zone. The bare rocks common along the New England coast have been bare only since the Periwinkle arrived, and the intertidal fauna has changed substantially as a result.

    17. Domination of ecosystems by an introduced species is an extreme case, of which the zebra mussel in the Great Lakes is a prime example. Disease: invasive species may carry diseases to which native species are not adapted. Many of the Hawaiian bird species became extinct not just through hunting, habitat destruction, and introduced predators, but they fell victim to the avian malaria that made it to the islands in introduced Asian songbirds.

    18. Hybridization : introduced species may not be quite genetically separated from a native species, and can then proceed to hybridize. This process may mean the end of a genetically somewhat, but not quite, separated local population. The American cordgrass was introduced in England, either in ballast water or intentionally, to better control erosion in coastal waters, and hybridized with a local species; the hybrids were sterile, however. The sterile hybrid, however, mutated to a new, fertile species and is now an invasive species.

    19. Foreign species in US: 50,000 foreign species (incl. crops, livestock) 42% 'Threatened or Endangered species' because of non-indigenous species (especially in Hawaii, Florida, Puerto Rico) , where frost is no control.

    20. What types of species are invasive in the US? ?Plants: 5000 plant species (17,000 native species);73% of the weed species non-indigenous Mammals: 20 species (dogs, cats, horses, burros, cattle, sheep, pigs, goats, deer, European rat, Asiatic rat, house mouse, European rabbit, Indian mongoose Birds: 97 of 1,000 species; chickens, pigeon; starling, sparrow Amphibians and Reptiles: ~53 species (warm states)

    21. ?Fish: 138 fish (warm states); positive: sport fishing? Arthropoda (insects, spiders, shrimps): 4,500 land arthropod species (2,582 in Hawaii; >2,000 in continental US; ~500 insect pests).? Earthworms 11 species? Mollusca: 88 species (zebra mussel, ship worm, Asian clam);100 aquatic arthropods and worms (>95% accidental)? Microscopic phytoplankton/ zooplankton? (dinoflagellates, diatoms)?Parasites; fungal pests; pathogens

    22. Stemming the tide: ?keep them out (too late for many) eradicate them (that's not easy) control them (that also may not be easy, but what we have to live with)

    23. Conclusions A major threat to ecosystem health (especially where ecosystems are already impacted) A major factor in species extinction, especially in tropical climates and on islands A major threat for global biodiversity, because the transport of species in essence creates one global ecosystem The cause of major financial damages Hardly or not limited in spread by international treaties

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