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入侵物种对动物群落的慢性影响。

Chronic effects of an invasive species on an animal community.

机构信息

Department of Biological Sciences, Southeastern Louisiana University, Hammond, Louisiana, 70402, USA.

School of Environmental and Life Sciences, University of Newcastle, Callaghan, New South Wales, 2308, Australia.

出版信息

Ecology. 2017 Aug;98(8):2093-2101. doi: 10.1002/ecy.1889. Epub 2017 Jun 28.

Abstract

Invasive species can trigger trophic cascades in animal communities, but published cases involving their removal of top predators are extremely rare. An exception is the invasive cane toad (Rhinella marina) in Australia, which has caused severe population declines in monitor lizards, triggering trophic cascades that facilitated dramatic and sometimes unexpected increases in several prey of the predators, including smaller lizards, snakes, turtles, crocodiles, and birds. Persistence of isolated populations of these predators with a decades-long sympatry with toads suggests the possibility of recovery, but alternative explanations are possible. Confirming predator recovery requires longer-term study of populations with both baseline and immediate post-invasion densities. Previously, we quantified short-term impacts of invasive cane toads on animal communities over seven years at two sites in tropical Australia. Herein, we test the hypothesis that predators have begun to recover by repeating the study 12 yr after the initial toad invasion. The three predatory lizards that experienced 71-97% declines in the short-term study showed no sign of recovery, and indeed a worse fate: two of the three species were no longer detectable in 630 km of river surveys, suggesting local extirpation. Two mesopredators that had increased markedly in the short term due to these predator losses showed diverse responses in the medium term; a small lizard species increased by ~500%, while populations of a snake species showed little change. Our results indicate a system still in ecological turmoil, having not yet reached a "new equilibrium" more than a decade after the initial invasion; predator losses due to this toxic invasive species, and thus downstream effects, were not transient. Given that cane toads have proven too prolific to eradicate or control, we suggest that recovery of impacted predators must occur unassisted by evolutionary means: dispersal into extinction sites from surviving populations with alleles for toxin resistance or toad avoidance. Evolution and subsequent dispersal may be the only solution for a number of species or communities affected by invasive species for which control is either prohibitively expensive, or not possible.

摘要

入侵物种会在动物群落中引发营养级联,但有关其去除顶级捕食者的已发表案例极为罕见。一个例外是澳大利亚的入侵甘蔗蟾蜍(Rhinella marina),它导致巨蜥数量严重减少,引发了营养级联,从而导致捕食者的一些猎物数量急剧增加,有时甚至出乎意料,包括较小的蜥蜴、蛇、海龟、鳄鱼和鸟类。这些捕食者的孤立种群在与蟾蜍共存数十年后仍能存活,这表明它们有可能恢复,但也可能存在其他解释。确认捕食者的恢复需要对具有基线和入侵后立即密度的种群进行更长期的研究。此前,我们在澳大利亚热带地区的两个地点对入侵甘蔗蟾蜍对动物群落的短期影响进行了长达七年的量化研究。在此,我们通过在最初蟾蜍入侵 12 年后重复这项研究来检验捕食者已经开始恢复的假设。在短期研究中下降了 71-97%的三种掠食性蜥蜴没有表现出恢复的迹象,实际上情况更糟:其中两种在 630 公里的河流调查中已经无法检测到,这表明它们已经局部灭绝。由于这些捕食者的损失而在短期内显著增加的两种中型捕食者在中期表现出不同的反应;一种小型蜥蜴物种增加了约 500%,而一种蛇类的种群数量几乎没有变化。我们的研究结果表明,在最初入侵十多年后,该系统仍处于生态混乱之中,尚未达到“新的平衡”;由于这种有毒入侵物种的影响,以及因此产生的下游效应,捕食者的损失并非是暂时的。鉴于甘蔗蟾蜍已经繁殖过多,无法根除或控制,我们认为,受影响的捕食者的恢复必须在没有进化手段帮助的情况下发生:具有抗毒素或避免蟾蜍的等位基因的幸存种群扩散到灭绝地点。对于因控制成本过高或不可能而受到入侵物种影响的许多物种或群落,进化和随后的扩散可能是唯一的解决方案。

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