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Experimental study of species invasion : early population dynamics and role of disturbance in invasion success

Publiceringsår

2020

Upphovspersoner

Reznick, David N.; De Bona, Sebastiano; López-Sepulcre, Andrés; Torres, Mauricio; Bassar, Ronald D.; Benzen, Paul; Travis, Joseph

Abstrakt

Much of our understanding of natural invasions is retrospective, based on data acquired after invaders become established. As a consequence, we know little about the characteristics of the early population growth and habitat use of the invaders during establishment. Here we report on experimental introductions of guppies into natural streams in which we conducted monthly censuses of each population. Two of the four introductions were in streams with thinned canopies, which mimics a common form of habitat disturbance. We conducted similar censuses of natural populations to characterize natural population densities and generate a null distribution against which we could test a priori hypotheses about the establishment of the experimental invaders. We constructed a pedigree for one population, which enabled us to quantify lifetime reproductive success. Population simulations predict that the nature of the introduced population’s life history, in combination with reduced risk of predation in the introduction sites, will result in explosive population growth; however, populations of introduced invaders instead grew to match densities observed in natural streams with intact canopies. Experimental populations in streams with thinned canopies grew to densities that often exceeded those of natural streams with intact canopies. High population densities were associated with the increased use of marginal habitat. Adult females and males that moved into marginal habitat suffered no apparent fitness loss, suggesting lower population densities found there compensated for lower habitat quality. Our results suggest that the ecological setting in which invasions occur plays a role at least comparable in importance to that of the invader’s inherent characteristics in shaping early population growth and habitat use.
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Organisationer och upphovspersoner

Jyväskylä universitet

De Bona Sebastiano Orcid -palvelun logo

Publikationstyp

Publikationsform

Artikel

Moderpublikationens typ

Tidning

Artikelstyp

En originalartikel

Målgrupp

Vetenskaplig

Kollegialt utvärderad

Kollegialt utvärderad

UKM:s publikationstyp

A1 Originalartikel i en vetenskaplig tidskrift

Publikationskanalens uppgifter

Volym

90

Nummer

3

Artikelnummer

e01413

Publikationsforum

54973

Publikationsforumsnivå

3

Öppen tillgång

Öppen tillgänglighet i förläggarens tjänst

Nej

Parallellsparad

Ja

Övriga uppgifter

Vetenskapsområden

Ekologi, evolutionsbiologi

Nyckelord

[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object],[object Object]

Publiceringsland

Förenta staterna (USA)

Förlagets internationalitet

Internationell

Språk

engelska

Internationell sampublikation

Ja

Sampublikation med ett företag

Nej

DOI

10.1002/ecm.1413

Publikationen ingår i undervisnings- och kulturministeriets datainsamling

Ja