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Terminology

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Terminology. The scope of the problem. Economic impacts. Questions, hypotheses, examples. Some terminology:. exotic. introduced. alien. non-indigenous. Some terminology:. exotic. introduced. alien. non-indigenous. weed. ruderal. Some terminology:. exotic. introduced. alien. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Terminology The scope of the problem Economic impacts Questions, hypotheses, examples
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Page 1: Terminology

Terminology

The scope of the problem

Economic impacts

Questions, hypotheses, examples

Page 2: Terminology

Some terminology:

exotic introduced alien non-indigenous

Page 3: Terminology

weed ruderal

Some terminology:

exotic introduced alien non-indigenous

Page 4: Terminology

weed ruderal

invasive

Some terminology:

exotic introduced alien non-indigenous

Page 5: Terminology

weed ruderal

invasive

Can a native plant be invasive?

Some terminology:

exotic introduced alien non-indigenous

Page 6: Terminology

•Little understory•Decreased forage

•increased soil erosion

•Decreased soil fertility

•Decreased range value

Pinyon-juniper expansion…

Page 7: Terminology

“If humans introduced the species and humans are natural, then aren’t introduced species natural?”

Page 8: Terminology

•Most invaders have not reached their new ranges via dispersal mechanisms that have evolved in their specific lineage(s);

•Biogeographic barriers to dispersal (oceans, mtns, etc) have been broken down by humans;

•The rate at which we’re moving species around the globe is much higher than that at which species would move without human intervention.

Page 9: Terminology

The scope of the problem

May be the second largest cause of species declines after habitat loss:

(Wilcove et al., 1998)

Page 10: Terminology

The scope of the problem, or How many sp have been introduced?

introduction invasion

time

Page 11: Terminology

5000 exotic plant species have become established in non-cultivated ecosystems in US (compared to 17,000 native species)

The scope of the problem, or How many sp have been introduced?

Page 12: Terminology

Florida: 25,000 introduced; 900 have become established in surrounding natural ecosystems (Simberloff et al., 1997)

< 4 %

The scope of the problem, or How many sp have been introduced?

Page 13: Terminology

The “tens” rule:

1000 plants introduced100 escape10 become naturalized 1 will become invasive

Williamson and Fitter, 1996

Page 14: Terminology

Biodiversity has increased 20% in North America mainly due to introductions…

No extinctions through plant-plant competition

Davis, 2003

Page 15: Terminology

$

Page 16: Terminology

FORESTS: ?

RANGE systems:

$1 billion in lost forage crops

$5 billion spent by ranchers to control weeds (palatability issue – e.g., leafy spurge and some thistles)

Costs due to invasive exotic species:

Pimental et al., 2000

Page 17: Terminology

?

Page 18: Terminology

Why do some species become invasive?

What makes some communities invasible?

Page 19: Terminology

Why do some species become invasive?

Page 20: Terminology

Invasive plants havedifferent strategies:

stolons:

Page 21: Terminology

To copious seed production:

Page 22: Terminology

Why do some species become invasive?

•pines in S. Africa (Rejmanek and Richardson, 1996) –

24 pine species

10 life history traits

•Woody plants in US (Reichard & Hamilton, 1996) –

Predictive models:

Page 23: Terminology

Why do some species become invasive?

Taxonomic analysis (à la Daehler, 1998)

•N-fixing•Aquatic•Clonal (trees)•Grasses•Climbers

Page 24: Terminology

Why do some species become invasive?

Climate-matching…

Page 25: Terminology

Why do some species become invasive?

Some hypotheses…

Page 26: Terminology

Natural Enemies Hypothesis

Evolutionary increased competitive ability (Blossey, Callaway, Buckley et al., 2003)

Why do some species become invasive?

Page 27: Terminology

Why are some communities invasible?

•Disturbance

•Low diversity

Biotic Resistance Hypothesis

Page 28: Terminology

Why are some communities invasible?

•Disturbance

•Low diversity

Biotic Resistance Hypothesis

fire

Page 29: Terminology

Very diverse communities are highly invaded

Stohlgren et al., multiple times

Page 30: Terminology

Given sufficient propagule supply, few communities are likely to remain free of invasion

Upshot on community invasibility:

Page 31: Terminology

Some particular issues for forest and range systems:

Next lecture – range weeds (cheatgrass, among others)

Today: some specific forest/ forestry concerns

Page 32: Terminology

EXOTIC•Pests (insects, disease)•Trees•Understory

Page 33: Terminology

•Exotic tree plantations

•Exotic species in the understory

Page 34: Terminology

Exotic tree plantations

•Dominate forest productivity in many areas

Sitka spruce in BritainCaribean pine and slash pine in AustraliaLoblolly pine in various areas

Page 35: Terminology

Problems?

•They exhaust soil water and nutrient reserves,•Decreased understory growth (with decreases in overall diversity)•Soil erosion•Loss of soil fertility

•where plantations are adjacent to native forests

Exotic pines are considered invasive in Australia

Page 36: Terminology

On the other hand,

On sites with degraded soils, fast-growing trees (like eucalypts) help regeneration of understory species from surrounding areas, thus increasing their biodiversity and fertility

(Harrington and Ewel, 1998)

Caveat: but abundance is constrained by presence of alien species

Page 37: Terminology

Exotic understory species in native forests

•How do invasive species change the understory component?

•How do such changes affect ecosystem processes like productivity (NPP)?

Page 38: Terminology

Example: Australian dry rainforests & subtropical rainforests

Rubber vine Camphor laurel

Changing understory?Changing NPP?

Page 39: Terminology

Japanese barberry is a pest in US eastern forests:

Changing understory? Changing NPP?

Page 40: Terminology

How do management practices affect invasions?

Are managed forests more invaded than protected ones?

No: Kaufman et al., 2003

Page 41: Terminology

What are the mechanisms?

•Competition? •Allelopathy?•Alteration of ecosystem variables?•Other processes?

< 5% of “impact” studies actually document this(Levine et al., 2003)

Page 42: Terminology

Why do only a small fraction of established exotic plants have significant impacts?

Why do invaders have large impacts in some systems but not others?


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