Human influence on invasive speciessteemCreated with Sketch.

in #nature8 years ago (edited)

Organisms have been moved around the world since the very beginning of life on Earth! But the scale of these movements was too limited to affect native species or their habitats because they moved in small numbers, over limited distances and slowly.

The spatial movement of (non-native) species follows the development of commercial intercontinental traffic, promoted by the dawn of the Age of Discovery and European colonialism.

Padrão dos Descobrimentos, Lisboa, Portugal
Source: Pixabay

If in the beginning, the sailing ships travels dependend on the wind patterns, with the advent of navigation systems and steam-powered ships, the number of possible pathways increased remarkably.

British steamer routes and large coaling stations as of 1899. Notice the number of connections between locations around the world that were established well before modern global trade and airplane transport developed.
Source: Lockwood JL, Hoopes MF, Marchetti MP (2007) Invasion Ecology. Blackwell Publishing, Oxford, UK, p. 35.

As you can imagine, with the rise of airplane transport, as well as people traveling around the world or demanding products, this human - assisted migrations of non-native species has increased dramatically.

In Western societies, from the great explorations until the early 20th century, non-native species were introduced elsewhere and considered ‘exotic’ curiosities, often viewed as a resource.

Many of this transported species were introduced as assets, with aesthetic and ornamental (plants and pets) purpose, or economic value.

But with time, some of those introductions became a threat to native species and ecosystems and for human well-being. Some of those became INVASIVE!

Charles Darwin was on of the first 19th century scientists mentioning invasive species in his writings. In The Origin of Species he described natives ‘conquered’ by introduced species (p. 69) and ‘yielding before advancing legions of plants and animals introduced from Europe’ (p. 164) and referred to ‘intruders’ (pp. 259, 314) having ‘invaded’ (p. 263) territories of other species. He also made important observations on the ecology of two species of thistles, both native to Europe, that were introduced in Argentina.

Some facts about invasive impacts:

  • The introduction of the Nile perch (Lates niloticus) into Lake Victoria by authorities in the 1960s. This led to the disappearance of up to 200 native cichlid fish species, described by some scientists as “the greatest single paroxysm of extinction ever recorded”.
  • The jelly fish or Leidy’s comb jelly (Mnemiopsis leidyi) caused a trophic-level disaster when it was introduced into the Black Sea in Europe from the Americas via ballast water. It began foraging on zooplankton and as it had no natural predators, lead to the collapse of anchovy farms and other fisheries on the Black Sea.
  • Feral pigs (Sus scrofa) are an example of the damage which can be caused to island ecosystems by invasive species. They invaded pristine ecological sites in the Hawaiian islands, damaging native ecosystems by uprooting native plants and facilitating the spread of other introduced plant and bird species, including mosquitoes which carry avian diseases.
  • Invasive rats are some of the largest contributors to seabird extinction and population declines globally. The 3 species of invasive rats, black rat (Rattus rattus) had the largest mean impact on seabirds followed by the Norway rat (R. norvegicus and ship rat (R. exulans)

Scopoli's shearwater (Calonectris diomedea) chick being attacked by a black rat

  • The small Indian mongoose (Herpestes auropunctatus/ Herpestes javanicus) were introduced to many islands worldwide for control of rats and snakes, mainly in tropical areas, and also to islands in the Adriatic Sea. They are diurnal generalist carnivores that thrive in human-altered habitats, and which predation lead to the decline and extirpation of native mammals, birds, reptiles, and amphibians.
  • Cheat grass (Bromus tectorum), a native of Eurasia, was first recognized in North America in 1889. It produces a litter that is slow to decompose and has drastically increased the frequency of fires in arid rangeland systems to a nearly annual cycle. This had lead to an almost complete loss of native woody species over large areas, and due to lack of cover and forage, songbirds and rodents abandon areas dominated by cheat grass.
  • Bark stripping by gray squirrels (Sciurus carolinensis) on forestry production, and directly competing for habitat with the red squirrel (Sciurus vulgaris) in Britain and Italy.

Source: ISSG

Invasive species come with a huge monetary cost

In Europe the costs of invasive species can be estimated as €12.7 billion/year (source)

In the USA, it is estimated that damage and control cost of invasive species amounts to more than $138 billion/year (source)

Do you still want to bring living organisms as a souvenir from your travels?!

HOPE NOT!!


P.S. 1 - Did you find this matter of interest?
P.S. 2 - What can I do to improve my writing? Feel free to comment​ and upvote :)

Have a nice Friday and weekend!!

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Very nice post and an important issue to draw attention to as well! The impact of invasive species on various ecosystems is much larger than many people realize. Thank you for taking the time to bring light to this issue!

As a bonus, and in addition to resteeming for exposure. We are awarding you a small 5 Steem Power deposit as a thank you for creating quality STEM related postings on Steemit. We hope you will continue to educate us all!

Very interesting. Thanks for putting this comment here. I'll have to follow this!

Thank you so much!! I will keep writing on this subject, it's important that more people get aware and help the cause.

Great post @liliana.duate! I responded with a long reply to @haphazard-hstead
about our plagues. I don't know what the costs are in Canada, but we have a terrible problem with insects as well as fish - many are getting rid of their gold fish for example - just pouring them into streams, ponds etc and they get huge and eat native fish. We need to keep our native species where they grow.
Anyhow, I could go on. Thanks for this post....it's a very important reminder.

Thanks for your contribution on this subject. It's good for me to know more about invasives species in other parts of the world. I only became aware of this subject about 9 years ago, but since then I'm always trying to get more knowledge. So glad that Steemit enables us to get in touch with people all over the world!!

You're right! The world becomes smaller when we share information. Glad to add to your knowledge.
You gave me more to think about and reminded me again of the importance to grow native plants only.

It's hard to even imagine what some of our ecosysttems looked like before the invasive exotics got here. And some, right now, are breaking my heart. The loss of the ash trees in the eastern US by the Emerald Ash Borer just breaks my heart. White ash, blue ash, green ash, black ash - so many ash tree where I used to live in southern Michigan. And they are virtually all gone now. Just since 2002. And the borers are spreading, too. Breaks my heart.

We too in Canada are losing our trees to the Emerald Ash Borer, once infected the trees die, there is no fix except to remove the tree. We had so many removed last year in our neighborhood. The other nasty is the Asian Longhorn Beetle. It's about the size of a nickel - who uses those today? But there are restrictions regarding this beetle - wood can't be delivered from one place to another in some cases. I believe these nasties kill Maple trees. Our native tree! The one I war against the most is the Japanese Beetle. We had such a huge infestation for a couple of years. The beetles do not have a predator - birds do not like them, skunks and raccoons don't eat their larvae. We lost most of our bushes and a few trees and all of our fruit trees to this beetle. The are attracted to mostly red foilage and fruits. Some people use a Japanese Beetle trap - it looks like a yellow flying tube...attracts them from over 1km - that's the problem. The are attracting them to our area with this trap but the beetles find other gardens on the way.
The only way to get rid of them is to hand pick them from the leaves in the morning and late afternoon. They are disgusting but it's the only way. Carry a bucket of warm soapy water and knock them in. The grubs from these are a lot bigger than other grubs. We lost our lawn, grape vine, peach tree, cherry tree, Japanese Maple, Burning Bush, Holly bushes, Hydrangea, Peonies and more. Ick Ick Ick!!!!
The other remedy is plant native plants and buy nothing that has a hybrid or has come from another country or a non native area....that's what we did and didn't have one beetle this year.

Wow - you have been waging battle on a lot of fronts. Wait until you get the spotted wing drosophila, too - it's headed your way and is tough business for cherries, especially. The Japanese beetles sound really bad - eating anything and everything. And those Asian Longhorn Beetles - ouch. I admit to buying about a decade's worth of maple syrup, just because of them. They will change the face of the whole northern hardwood forests. Now we know what folks felt like when the chestnuts and American elm were dying. I'm with you on shipping plants all over the place -- and wooden pallets, too. Buy local or start from seeds. We just have to hang in there...

I should post a picture of the japanese beetle plague....so disgusting.

Yes, indeed! It's worth a post - and a warning to folks about not carrying firewood long distances when folks go on the road camping.

Thanks so much for your comment and contribution. Today I've learned about invasive beetles on Canada and United States!! I had no idea that North America was having such a bad experience with invasive insects. Choosing native plants it's a very wise option :)

Thank you for commenting and sharing that ash tree situation. That's so sad, indeed as ash are such beautiful trees. I googled a little and found this site and that there was some biological control already taking place. Hope those wasps can contain it! Some vegetation ecologists study the potential vegetation based on phytosociological data, wich helps in a recovery plan. But it's not the same...

You're welcome. People are working hard to figure something out. In the meantime, all the other parts of our ecosystems have to adapt - us, too. Your post prompted a lot of thinking!

Guess I did. Love this kind of interaction on Steemit, it let me think on some diseases our native trees (oak trees) are facing, but not with that ash borer brutality!!

Those Phytophthora are such a trouble-causing genus. I wonder if there are any good ones - any!

Answering here because the comment chain hit its limit.

i don´t know either. Every time I heard about Phythopora it had a negative connotation...:(

Here on the US West Coast, the Oak Wilt is a huge, huge problem. I wonder what your oak trees are facing? There is no end to the stresses on our trees these days! But we can appreciate them now.

Here, on South Portugal, our cork and holm oak trees are facing a lot of diseases, but the harmful is a fungus disease (Phytophthora cinnamomi) that propagates by their roots. Prophylaxis plays an important role in the inhibition of this disease, but there are a lot of owners that don't know how to contain this disease, (yet).

Great post! Grey squirrels are pushing out red squirrels in The Netherlands too and we have a lot of invasive plants, like the Impatiens glandulifera, becoming dominant over native species.
Upvoted & followed.

I am always surprised to hear about North American species that are invasive somewhere else. I'm too focused on all the invasive exotic species we got from elsewhere, lol. And your invasive species are not invasive for us. Those grey squirrels are the number one hunted game species in the US. They have fed a lot of people over many, many years.

Maybe we should start hunting them as well.

I would recommend it! Here in Oregon's Willamette Valley, we have the big orange-tinted Fox Squirrel. I eat those regularly. I grew up eating the gray and the fox squirrels. Those two squirrels eat nuts and fruit and spend their time up off the ground. They are, by far, a cleaner, more disease-free meat than wild rabbits or hares.

Here's an interesting nugget about those gray squirrels: back in the time of European settlement and even into the early 1900s, every few years, the gray squirrels would go on a mass migration. Thousands and thousands moving across the forested landscape. There is some amazing reading about them. Squirrels are so interesting - I could go on and on, lol!

Migration? Like lemmings? Why? Too large a population? Or is it unknown why?

They haven't figured out why. The suspicion is a big acorn crop the year before that built populations up a lot. And then not enough food the next year. But the scale of the migrations was so large. In checking some history just now, my statement of thousands was way low -- some estimates of half a billion in one migration of the mid-1800s. I can't even imagine that.

Thanks so much! Thanks for commenting too. Here in Portugal we also have red-squirrel and, fortunately, it's not threatened by the gray one. We don't have Impatiens glandulifera, but we have others with great impacts on our biodiversity and fire regime like Acacia dalbata.

Following back ;)

Very nice and well detailed post! :) And very nice first picture (that recalls me one of my best trip ever)

So glad you like it too!! You already visited Lisbon?! So nice!! I lived there for 3 years, and start loving the place! Now I only go from times to times. What did you liked the most?? :)

I made a road trip around Portugal 6-7 years ago. I spent 2-3 weeks there, and this country was a real great discovery! I am looking forward to go back there, but I actually do not know exactly when this could append due to my current personal situation.

Ok, hope you're life allow it soon. And if you're interested in visiting Évora I can advise for places for a good meal!

I was there during my trip. An extremely beautiful city as well. Who knows what the life will be? :)

Obrigada @jasantana! Ainda bem que há alguém que aprecia o nosso trabalho! :)

Really great job with this post! :)

Só glad you like it!! I Love this subject but i'm not sure if other steemians are interested too

You have to make them interested :)

That's the hardest part, but i'll keep trying my best! :)

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