Lettoof Damian C, Lyons Jessica A, Shine Richard, Maniel Grégoire, Mayer Martin, Natusch Daniel J D
School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Sydney, NSW, Australia.
Resource Evaluation and Development, Bamaga, QLD, Australia.
Curr Zool. 2018 Aug;64(4):433-439. doi: 10.1093/cz/zox041. Epub 2017 Jun 14.
Many invasive species exploit anthropogenically disturbed habitats, but most of those taxa evolved long before humans. Presumably, then, an ability to use natural (non-anthropogenic) disturbances pre-adapted invaders to a world later degraded by people. Studies on invasive species in naturally disturbed habitats thus can clarify the ancestral niche of invaders. In the Australian tropics, metallic starlings nest communally in emergent rainforest trees during the wet-season, and invasive cane toads join other predators (mammals, birds, reptiles, and other anurans) to exploit the food resources beneath those trees. Compared to conspecifics found along nearby roads through the forest, cane toads beneath bird-nesting trees occur at higher densities, and are smaller in body size. The sex ratio is female-biased, and recapture records suggest that females may be philopatric at these sites (whereas recaptures were rare for both sexes found along the roads). Some toads were found under the same trees in successive wet-seasons. Spooling showed that distances moved per night were similar along the road versus under the trees, but toads under trees showed lower net displacements. Diets also differed (based upon scat analysis), with tree toads feeding more on beetles and less on ants. These nutrient-rich hotspots are exploited primarily by adult females and juvenile toads, whereas adult males congregate at breeding sites. By magnifying pre-existing intraspecific divergences in habitat use, bird rookeries may enhance population viability of cane toads by enabling critical age and sex classes to exploit food-rich patches that are rarely used by adult males.
许多入侵物种利用人为干扰的栖息地,但这些分类群大多在人类出现之前很久就已进化。那么,可以推测,利用自然(非人为)干扰的能力使入侵者预先适应了后来被人类破坏的世界。因此,对自然干扰栖息地中的入侵物种进行研究可以阐明入侵者的原始生态位。在澳大利亚热带地区,金属椋鸟在雨季会在雨林大树上群居筑巢,入侵的甘蔗蟾蜍会与其他捕食者(哺乳动物、鸟类、爬行动物和其他无尾目动物)一起利用树下的食物资源。与沿着穿过森林的附近道路发现的同种个体相比,在鸟巢树下的甘蔗蟾蜍密度更高,体型更小。性别比例偏向雌性,重捕记录表明雌性可能在这些地点具有留居性(而在道路上发现的两性重捕情况都很少见)。在连续的雨季中,一些蟾蜍在同一棵树下被发现。追踪显示,每晚移动的距离在道路和树下是相似的,但树下的蟾蜍净位移较低。饮食也有所不同(基于粪便分析),树下的蟾蜍更多以甲虫为食,较少以蚂蚁为食。这些营养丰富的热点区域主要被成年雌性蟾蜍和幼蟾蜍利用,而成年雄性蟾蜍则聚集在繁殖地点。通过放大栖息地利用中已有的种内差异,鸟类栖息地可能通过使关键年龄和性别的蟾蜍利用成年雄性蟾蜍很少使用的食物丰富区域来提高甘蔗蟾蜍的种群生存能力。