Pearson Dean E, Fletcher Robert J
Rocky Mountain Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Missoula, Montana 59801, USA.
Ecol Appl. 2008 Mar;18(2):321-34. doi: 10.1890/07-0766.1.
The threat posed by exotic organisms to native systems has led to extensive research on exotic invaders, yet management of invasives has progressed relatively slowly. This is partly due to poor understanding of how exotic species management influences native organisms. To address this shortfall, we experimentally evaluated the efficacy of an invasives management tool for restoring native deer mouse (Peromyscus maniculatus) populations elevated by exotic species. The exotic insects, Urophora spp., were introduced in North America for biological control of the Eurasian invader, spotted knapweed (Centaurea maculosa), but instead of controlling C. maculosa, Urophora have become an important food resource that doubles P. maniculatus populations, with substantial indirect effects on other organisms. We hypothesized that herbicide suppression of Urophora's host plant would reduce the Urophora food resource and restore P. maniculatus populations to natural levels. Prior to treatment, mouse populations did not differ between controls and treatments, but following treatment, P. maniculatus were half as abundant where treatment reduced Urophora. Peromyscus maniculatus is insensitive to direct herbicide effects, and herbicide-induced habitat changes could not explain the P. maniculatus response. Treatment-induced reductions of the Urophora food resource offered the most parsimonious explanation for the mouse response: Multistate mark-recapture models indicated that P. maniculatus survival declined where Urophora were removed, and survival rates were more correlated with variation in population size than movement rates. Other demographic and reproductive parameters (sex ratios, reproductive status, pregnancy rates, and juvenile recruitment) were unaffected by treatment. These results suggest the Urophora biocontrol elevated P. maniculatus survival, and the herbicide treatment restored mouse populations by removing the exotic food and reducing survival. This work illustrates the importance of mechanistic understandings of community and population ecology for improving invasive species management.
外来生物对本地生态系统构成的威胁引发了对外来入侵物种的广泛研究,然而入侵物种的管理进展相对缓慢。部分原因是对外来物种管理如何影响本地生物了解不足。为弥补这一缺陷,我们通过实验评估了一种入侵物种管理工具恢复因外来物种而增加的本地鹿鼠(白足鼠)种群数量的效果。外来昆虫——兔耳草实蝇属,被引入北美用于对欧亚入侵物种斑点矢车菊进行生物防治,但兔耳草实蝇没有控制住斑点矢车菊,反而成为了一种重要的食物资源,使白足鼠种群数量翻倍,对其他生物产生了重大间接影响。我们假设用除草剂抑制兔耳草实蝇的寄主植物会减少其食物资源,并使白足鼠种群数量恢复到自然水平。在处理之前,对照区和处理区的鼠类种群没有差异,但处理之后,在处理使兔耳草实蝇减少的地方,白足鼠的数量只有原来的一半。白足鼠对除草剂的直接作用不敏感,除草剂引起的栖息地变化也无法解释白足鼠数量的变化。处理导致兔耳草实蝇食物资源减少,这对白足鼠数量变化提供了最简洁的解释:多状态标记重捕模型表明,在兔耳草实蝇被清除的地方,白足鼠的存活率下降,存活率与种群数量变化的相关性比移动率更高。其他人口统计学和生殖参数(性别比例、生殖状态、怀孕率和幼崽补充率)不受处理影响。这些结果表明,兔耳草实蝇生物防治提高了白足鼠的存活率,除草剂处理通过去除外来食物和降低存活率恢复了鼠类种群数量。这项工作说明了对群落和种群生态学进行机理理解对于改善入侵物种管理的重要性。