USDA Forest Service Southern Research Station, 320 East Green Street, Athens, GA 30602, USA; Department of Entomology and Department of Evolution, Ecology and Behavior, University of Illinois, 320 Morrill Hall, 505 South Goodwin Avenue, Urbana, IL 61801, USA; Department of Entomology and Department of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Cornell University, 129 Garden Avenue, Ithaca, NY 14850, USA.
Department of Biology, University of Vermont, Burlington, VT 05405, USA.
Curr Biol. 2023 May 22;33(10):2088-2094.e6. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2023.03.044. Epub 2023 Apr 7.
There is a looming environmental crisis characterized by widespread declines in global biodiversity, coupled with the establishment of introduced species at accelerated rates. We quantified how multi-species invasions affect litter ant communities in natural ecosystems by leveraging museum records and contemporary collections to assemble a large (18,990 occurrences, 6,483 sampled local communities, and 177 species) 54-year (1965-2019) dataset for the entire state of Florida, USA. Nine of ten species that decreased most strongly in relative abundance ("losers") were native, while nine of the top ten "winners" were introduced species. These changes led to shifts in the composition of rare and common species: in 1965, only two of the ten most common ants were introduced, whereas by 2019, six of ten were introduced species. Native losers included seed dispersers and specialist predators, suggesting a potential loss of ecosystem function through time, despite no obvious loss of phylogenetic diversity. We also examined the role of species-level traits as predictors of invasion success. Introduced species were more likely to be polygynous than native species. The tendency to form supercolonies, where workers from separate nests integrate, also differed between native and introduced species and was correlated with the degree to which species increased in their rank abundances over 50 years. In Florida, introduced ants now account for 30% of occurrence records, and up to 70% in southern Florida. If current trends continue, introduced species will account for over half of occurrence records in all Florida's litter ant communities within the next 50 years.
存在着一场迫在眉睫的环境危机,其特征是全球生物多样性广泛减少,同时引入物种的速度也在加快。我们利用博物馆记录和当代藏品,组装了一个大型的(18990 次发生,6483 个采样的本地群落和 177 个物种)54 年(1965-2019 年)的数据集,以量化多物种入侵如何影响自然生态系统中的碎屑蚂蚁群落,该数据集覆盖了美国佛罗里达州全境。在相对丰度下降最强烈的十个物种中,有九个是本地物种(“失败者”),而排名前十的“胜利者”中有九个是引入物种。这些变化导致了稀有和常见物种组成的变化:在 1965 年,最常见的十种蚂蚁中只有两种是引入种,而到 2019 年,十种中有六种是引入种。本地失败者包括种子传播者和专门的捕食者,这表明随着时间的推移,生态系统功能可能会丧失,尽管没有明显的系统发育多样性损失。我们还研究了物种水平特征作为入侵成功预测因子的作用。引入种比本地种更有可能是多配偶的。工人从单独的巢穴中整合形成超级群体的倾向,在本地种和引入种之间也存在差异,并且与物种在 50 年内其丰度排名增加的程度相关。在佛罗里达州,引入蚂蚁现在占发生记录的 30%,在佛罗里达州南部高达 70%。如果当前的趋势继续下去,在未来 50 年内,引入种将占佛罗里达州所有碎屑蚂蚁群落发生记录的一半以上。