Department of Biology, Lake Forest College, Lake Forest, Illinois, 60045, USA.
Department of Entomology & Nematology, and Center for Population Biology, University of California at Davis, Davis, California, 95616, USA.
Ecology. 2018 May;99(5):1194-1202. doi: 10.1002/ecy.2200. Epub 2018 Apr 26.
The ecological effects of species introductions can change in magnitude over time, but an understanding of how and why they do so remains incompletely understood. Clarifying this issue requires consideration of how temporal variation in invader traits affects invasion impacts (e.g., through differential effects on the diversity and composition of native species assemblages). We examine the temporal dynamics of Argentine ant invasions in northern California by resurveying 202 sites first sampled 30-40 yr ago. To test how invasion impacts change over time, we estimated native ant richness and species composition at 20 riparian woodland sites that span a 30-yr invasion chronosequence. We then use these data to test how variation in two invader traits (aggression and relative abundance) is related to time since invasion and invasion impact. Native ant assemblages along the chronosequence exhibited reduced native ant richness and altered species composition (compared to uninvaded control sites), but the magnitude of these impacts was independent of time since invasion. These results are corroborated by additional temporal comparisons of native ant assemblages at riparian sites sampled 20-30 yr ago. Our findings together illustrate that the impacts of invasions can persist undiminished over at least a 30-yr time frame and remain evident at regional scales. Although neither invader trait varied with time since invasion, native ant richness declined as the relative abundance of the Argentine ant increased. This latter result supports the hypothesis that factors reducing invader abundance at particular sites can decrease invasion impacts, but also that such changes may be due to site-specific factors (e.g., abiotic conditions) that affect invader abundance rather than time since invasion per se. Future studies should attempt to differentiate factors that are intrinsic to the process of invasion (e.g., changes in invader populations) from long-term environmental changes (e.g., climate change) that represent extrinsic influences on the dynamics of invasion.
物种引入的生态影响随时间的推移可能会发生变化,但对于这种变化的发生机制和原因,我们仍知之甚少。要阐明这一问题,就需要考虑入侵物种特征的时间变化如何影响入侵的影响(例如,通过对本地物种组合的多样性和组成产生不同的影响)。我们通过重新调查 30-40 年前首次采样的 202 个地点,研究了北加利福尼亚州阿根廷蚁入侵的时间动态。为了测试入侵影响随时间的变化,我们在 20 个河岸林地地点估计了本地蚂蚁的丰富度和物种组成,这些地点跨越了 30 年的入侵时间序列。然后,我们使用这些数据来测试两个入侵物种特征(攻击性和相对丰度)的变化如何与入侵时间和入侵影响相关。随着时间序列的发展,本地蚂蚁群落表现出本地蚂蚁丰富度降低和物种组成改变(与未受入侵的对照点相比),但这些影响的程度与入侵时间无关。这些结果得到了在 20-30 年前对河岸地点进行的额外时间比较的支持。我们的发现共同说明了,入侵的影响至少在 30 年的时间框架内可以持续不减,并在区域范围内仍然明显。尽管两个入侵物种特征都没有随入侵时间而变化,但本地蚂蚁的丰富度随着阿根廷蚁相对丰度的增加而下降。这一结果支持了这样一种假设,即在特定地点减少入侵物种数量的因素可以降低入侵的影响,但也表明这种变化可能是由于影响入侵物种数量的特定地点因素(例如,非生物条件),而不是入侵时间本身。未来的研究应该尝试区分入侵过程中内在的因素(例如,入侵物种种群的变化)与代表入侵动态的外在影响的长期环境变化(例如,气候变化)。