Maerz John C, Nuzzo Victoria A, Blossey Bernd
Department of Natural Resources, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY 14851, USA.
Conserv Biol. 2009 Aug;23(4):975-81. doi: 10.1111/j.1523-1739.2009.01167.x. Epub 2009 Feb 19.
Factors that negatively affect the quality of wildlife habitat are a major concern for conservation. Non-native species invasions, in particular, are perceived as a global threat to the quality of wildlife habitat. Recent evidence indicates that some changes to understory plant communities in northern temperate forests of North America, including invasions by 3 non-native plant species, are facilitated by non-native earthworm invasion. Furthermore, non-native earthworm invasions cause a reduction in leaf litter on the forest floor, and the loss of forest leaf litter is commonly associated with declines in forest fauna, including amphibians. We conducted a mark-recapture study of woodland salamander abundance across plant invasion fronts at 10 sites to determine whether earthworm or plant invasions were associated with reduced salamander abundance. Salamander abundance declined exponentially with decreasing leaf litter volume. There was no significant relationship between invasive plant cover and salamander abundance, independent of the effects of leaf litter loss due to earthworm invasion. An analysis of selected salamander prey abundance (excluding earthworms) at 4 sites showed that prey abundance declined with declining leaf litter. The loss of leaf litter layers due to non-native earthworm invasions appears to be negatively affecting woodland salamander abundance, in part, because of declines in the abundance of small arthropods that are a stable resource for salamanders. Our results demonstrate that earthworm invasions pose a significant threat to woodland amphibian fauna in the northeastern United States, and that plant invasions are symptomatic of degraded amphibian habitat but are not necessarily drivers of habitat degradation.
对野生动物栖息地质量产生负面影响的因素是保护工作的主要关注点。特别是非本地物种的入侵,被视为对野生动物栖息地质量的全球威胁。最近的证据表明,北美北部温带森林林下植物群落的一些变化,包括3种非本地植物物种的入侵,是由非本地蚯蚓入侵促成的。此外,非本地蚯蚓的入侵导致森林地面落叶层减少,而森林落叶层的丧失通常与包括两栖动物在内的森林动物数量下降有关。我们在10个地点对植物入侵前沿的林地蝾螈数量进行了标记重捕研究,以确定蚯蚓或植物入侵是否与蝾螈数量减少有关。蝾螈数量随着落叶量的减少呈指数下降。在不考虑蚯蚓入侵导致的落叶损失影响的情况下,入侵植物覆盖度与蝾螈数量之间没有显著关系。对4个地点选定的蝾螈猎物(不包括蚯蚓)数量的分析表明,猎物数量随着落叶量的减少而下降。非本地蚯蚓入侵导致落叶层的丧失似乎对林地蝾螈数量产生了负面影响,部分原因是作为蝾螈稳定食物来源的小型节肢动物数量减少。我们的研究结果表明,蚯蚓入侵对美国东北部的林地两栖动物构成了重大威胁,植物入侵是两栖动物栖息地退化的症状,但不一定是栖息地退化的驱动因素。