Cassey Phillip, Blackburn Tim M, Duncan Richard P, Gaston Kevin J
University of Birmingham School of Biosciences Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT, UK.
Proc Biol Sci. 2005 Oct 7;272(1576):2059-63. doi: 10.1098/rspb.2005.3193.
The probability that exotic species will successfully establish viable populations varies between regions, for reasons that are currently unknown. Here, we use data for exotic bird introductions to 41 oceanic islands and archipelagos around the globe to test five hypotheses for this variation: the effects of introduction effort, competition, predation, human disturbance and habitat diversity (island biogeography). Our analyses demonstrate the primary importance of introduction effort for avian establishment success across regions, in concordance with previous analyses within regions. However, they also reveal a strong negative interaction across regions between establishment success and predation; exotic birds are more likely to fail on islands with species-rich mammalian predator assemblages.
外来物种成功建立可存活种群的概率在不同地区有所不同,原因目前尚不清楚。在此,我们利用全球41个大洋岛屿和群岛引入外来鸟类的数据,来检验关于这种差异的五个假说:引入努力、竞争、捕食、人类干扰和栖息地多样性(岛屿生物地理学)的影响。我们的分析表明,引入努力对于鸟类在各地区建立种群的成功至关重要,这与之前在各地区内的分析结果一致。然而,分析还揭示了各地区之间建立种群成功与捕食之间存在强烈的负相互作用;外来鸟类在拥有物种丰富的哺乳动物捕食者组合的岛屿上更有可能失败。