Hernández-Brito Dailos, Blanco Guillermo, Tella José L, Carrete Martina
1Department of Conservation Biology, Estación Biológica de Doñana (CSIC), Avda. Américo Vespucio, 41092 Sevilla, Spain.
2Department of Evolutionary Ecology, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Naturales (CSIC), C/ José Gutiérrez Abascal 2, 28006 Madrid, Spain.
Front Zool. 2020 May 7;17:13. doi: 10.1186/s12983-020-00360-2. eCollection 2020.
Non-native species are often introduced in cities, where they take advantage of microclimatic conditions, resources provided by humans, and competitor/predator release to establish and proliferate. However, native communities in the surrounding rural or natural areas usually halt their spread through biotic resistance, mainly via top-down regulative processes (predation pressure). Here, we show an unusual commensal interaction between exotic and native bird species that favours the spread of the former from urban to rural habitats.
We show how Monk parakeets , an invasive species often introduced in cities worldwide, associated for breeding with a much larger, native species (the white stork ) to reduce predation risk in central Spain, thus allowing their colonization of rural areas. Parakeets selected stork nests close to conspecifics and where breeding raptors were less abundant. Parakeets always flushed when raptors approached their nests when breeding alone, but stayed at their nests when breeding in association with storks. Moreover, when storks abandoned a nest, parakeets abandoned it in the following year, suggesting that storks actually confer protection against predators.
Our results show how a protective-nesting association between invasive and native species can counteract biotic resistance to allow the spread of an invasive species across non-urban habitats, where they may become crop pests. Monk parakeet populations are now growing exponentially in several cities in several Mediterranean countries, where they coexist with white storks. Therefore, management plans should consider this risk of spread into rural areas and favour native predators as potential biological controllers.
非本地物种常常被引入城市,在那里它们利用微气候条件、人类提供的资源以及竞争/捕食压力的释放来建立种群并扩散。然而,周边农村或自然区域的本地群落通常会通过生物抗性,主要是通过自上而下的调节过程(捕食压力)来阻止它们的扩散。在这里,我们展示了外来鸟类和本地鸟类之间一种不寻常的共生关系,这种关系有利于前者从城市向农村栖息地扩散。
我们展示了和尚鹦鹉,一种在世界各地城市中经常被引入的入侵物种,如何与一种体型大得多的本地物种(白鹳)联合繁殖,以降低西班牙中部的捕食风险,从而使其能够在农村地区定居。和尚鹦鹉选择靠近同种个体且繁殖猛禽数量较少的鹳巢。单独繁殖时,当猛禽靠近巢穴时,和尚鹦鹉总是会飞走,但与白鹳一起繁殖时,它们会留在巢中。此外,当白鹳放弃一个巢穴时,和尚鹦鹉次年也会放弃该巢穴,这表明白鹳实际上提供了抵御捕食者的保护。
我们的研究结果表明,入侵物种和本地物种之间的保护性筑巢关联如何能够抵消生物抗性,从而使入侵物种得以在非城市栖息地扩散,在那里它们可能会成为农作物害虫。和尚鹦鹉种群目前在地中海国家的几个城市中呈指数增长,在那里它们与白鹳共存。因此,管理计划应考虑到这种向农村地区扩散的风险,并支持本地捕食者作为潜在的生物控制者。