McKillup S C, Allen P G, Skewes M A
Northfield Research Laboratories, South Australian Department of Agriculture, G.P.O. Box 1671, 5001, Adelaide, South Australia, Australia.
Oecologia. 1988 Nov;77(3):339-342. doi: 10.1007/BF00378039.
The black Portuguese millipede, Ommatoiulus moreletii, an exotic species first reported in Australia in 1953, shows a pattern of initial eruption and subsequent decline in abundance following its introduction to sites in South Australia. Comparative sampling of new, erupted populations and older, declined populations was done in an attempt to find testable hypotheses to account for the decline. We report on laboratory and field experiments which show that a native rhabditid nematode appears to be the causal agent for the decline of populations of O. moreletii in South Australia. Implications for the biological control of introduced species are discussed in terms of this work.
黑色葡萄牙千足虫(Ommatoiulus moreletii)是1953年首次在澳大利亚被报道的外来物种,在被引入南澳大利亚的一些地点后,其数量呈现出先爆发然后下降的模式。我们对新爆发的种群和数量已下降的较老种群进行了对比采样,试图找到可检验的假说来解释数量下降的原因。我们报告了实验室和野外实验,这些实验表明一种本地的小杆线虫似乎是南澳大利亚O. moreletii种群数量下降的致病因子。本文根据这项研究讨论了其对引进物种生物防治的启示。