Alien Species Flashcards

1
Q

Native species

A

Indigenous taxa found within their natural distributional range

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2
Q

Alien species

A

(Non-native, non-indigenous, foreign, exotic) Taxa found outside their natural distribution range and their occurrence is directly resultant from and possibly sustained by human intervention

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3
Q

Invasive species

A

Taxa found outside their natural distribution range as a result of human intervention and which have become established in natural or semi-natural habitats; they act as agents of habitat change and threaten native biodiversity

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4
Q

Adventive species

A

Taxa that naturally colonise new areas and are usually associated with early stages of succession

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5
Q

Introduction

A

The deliberate or accidental movement by humans of taxon outside its natural range

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6
Q

Naturalised species

A

Alien species that reproduce consistently and sustain populations over more than one life cycle without direct intervention by humans

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7
Q

Neophyte

A

Species introduced within <500 years

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8
Q

Archeophyte

A

Species introduced over 500 years

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9
Q

How can species be introduced?

A

Deliberate; Moving eggs, seeds, spores, vegetative parts or whole organisms, introduction clubs
Non-deliberate: Turned up fields, muddy shoes etc
Can also be introduced for economic gain e.g. wheat cattle

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10
Q

Pacific Aliens (Hawaii)

A

Have 900 native species and 4000 introduced plants, only 91 are invasive and will take over if not maintained, the 3rd biggest threat to biodiversity, due to lack of natural checks

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11
Q

New Zealand

A

Flora doubled as a result of ‘introduction clubs’, wanted to make settled land more like home. Also introduced 30 million foxes to act as pest control, but became pests.

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12
Q

Unintentional effects of AS

A

Faucet snail: Population sizes too big and fouled surfaces
Chinook Salmon: Ecological and genetic effects on native species
Western Mosquitofish: Displacement of native species
Can also kill humans e.g. bubonic plague, smallpox

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13
Q

The economic cost of aliens

A

Cost UK $12 billion every year.
In South Africa, the Nile perch is one of the largest freshwater fish and has led to the extinction of 200 endemic fish species through predation or competition for food.

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14
Q

Threats created by AS

A

Replacement of diverse ecosystems with single species
Invasion leading to extinction
Direct threat to natural fauna
Alternation of soil chemistry

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15
Q

How do Aliens invade?

A

Introduction: Either accidental or deliberate
Naturalisation: Establish initial populations and expand
Facilitation: Parallel introduction or fostering by humans
Spread: Efficient growth rates, fecundity and high dispersal
Biotic interactions: Fit in or push out
Stabilisation: Boom and bust

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16
Q

Characteristics of invasive animal species

A
Adaptability
Fast growing and maturity
High fecundity 
Broad diet
High migration ability
Aggressive competitor
17
Q

Characteristics of invasive plant species

A
Short and long dispersal 
Self-pollinating 
Seed longevity 
Can germinate in favourable conditions 
Early seed maturation 
Copious seeding
18
Q

Characteristics of Host Habitats

A
Absence of specific predators 
Balance of nature 
Empty niche
Chemical change 
Disturbance
19
Q

How to prevent AS

A

Prevention is better than cure
Need to be maintained
Use the legislation

20
Q

How to control and manage the introduction of AS

A
  1. Assessment
  2. Experimental
  3. Introduction
  4. Data monitoring
  5. Liability
21
Q

Why are remote islands so vulnerable?

A
Species poverty (few species)
Evolved in isolation 
Small scale 
Crossroads if intercontinental trade
Lack of previous pests or diseases