lecture 31- biological invasions Flashcards

1
Q

what is a non-native species?

A

A species introduced to a region outside of its natural (historical) range. In other words, it’s where it evolved.

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2
Q

What is a biological invasion?

A

The spread and establishment of a species into a region beyond its natural range. In other words, where it forms a self-sustaining population.

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3
Q

What is the process of biological invasion?

A

1- Introduction

2- Establishment: forming a self-sustaining population

3- Geographic spread: impacts often detected here

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4
Q

What is an invasive species?

A

A common definition: A species undergoing a population outbreak that causes adverse ecological or economic effects.

Another definition: An introduced (alien) species that spreads rapidly, i.e. a highly successful invader.

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5
Q

What are the 5 facts about biological invasions?

A

1- Species are being moved long distances to regions that they could never reach without human assistance.

2- Invasions are now occurring at unprecedented rates.

3- Invasive species are a major threat to native biodiversity.

4- Invasions can disrupt ecosystems, often in unpredictable ways.

5- Invasive species are hard to eradicate.

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6
Q

What is an example of an invasion of the past?

A

The Great American Biotic Exchange.

3 million years ago: North& South America becameconnected by the Panamaland bridge.
- Mammals moved north &south.
- A series of extinctions followed on both continents.

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7
Q

What is an example of a modern invasion?

A

European mammals to New Zealand

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8
Q

What are the 3 ways that modern (human-facilitated) invasions are occurring?

A

1- Accidental introductions:
– Hitchhikers (ballast water, brown tree snake)
– Escapees (Asian carp)

2- Deliberate introductions:
– Biological control (Mongoose)
– Live Trade:
* Food (Nile perch)
* Ornamental (Kudzu)
* Pet release (Goldfish)

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9
Q

Why were mongoose introduced? What went wrong?

A

Why: to control rats in sugar cane fields.

They ate more than just the rats and caused extinctions.

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10
Q

What are the differences between natural (prehistoric) and human-assisted invasions?

1- Frequency of long-distance dispersal events
2- Number of species transported per event
3- Variation in mechanisms & routes of dispersal
4- Frequency of invasions between biogeographic realms
5- Potential for synergies with other stressors

A

1- natural: very low; human: very high
2- natural: small, except during biotic exchange; human: potentially large
3- natural: small; human: very large
4- natural: rare; human: common
5- natural: low; human: very high

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11
Q

Are native or non-native consumers more damaging to prey populations?

A

non-native

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12
Q

When are eradications usually successful?

A

On island or lakes

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