The effects of temporally variable dispersal and landscape structure on invasive species spread

被引:43
作者
Andrew, Margaret E. [1 ]
Ustin, Susan L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Calif Davis, Dept Land Air & Water Resources, Davis, CA 95616 USA
关键词
corridors; habitat abundance; hyperspectral remote sensing; invasion rate; Lepidium latifolium (perennial pepperweed); regeneration niche; simulation model; spread rate; PLANT INVASIONS; POPULATION SPREAD; SPATIAL SPREAD; PHRAGMITES-AUSTRALIS; SIMULATION-MODEL; NORTH-AMERICA; DYNAMICS; DEMOGRAPHY; ECOLOGY; PATTERN;
D O I
10.1890/09-0034.1
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
Many invasive species are too widespread to realistically eradicate. For such species, a viable management strategy is to slow the rate of spread. However, to be effective, this will require detailed spread data and an understanding of the influence of environmental conditions and landscape structure on invasion rates. We used a time series of remotely sensed distribution maps and a spatial simulation model to study spread of the invasive Lepalium latifolium (perennial pepperweed) in California's Sacramento-San Joaquin River Delta. L. latifolium is a noxious weed and exhibited rapid, explosive spread. Annual infested area and empirical dispersal kernels were derived from the remotely sensed distributions in order to assess the influence of weather conditions on spread and to parameterize the simulation model. Spread rates and dispersal distances were highest for nascent infestations and in years with wet springs. Simulations revealed that spread rates were more strongly influenced by the length or long-distance dispersal than by temporal variation in its likelihood. It is thus important to capture long-distance dispersal and the conditions that facilitate spread when collecting data to parameterize spread models. Additionally, management actions performed in high-spread years, targeting long-distance recruits, can effectively contain infestations. Corridors were relatively unimportant to spread rates; their effectiveness at enhancing rate of spread was limited by the species' dispersal ability and the time needed to travel through the corridor. In contrast, habitat abundance and shape surrounding the introduction site strongly influenced invasion dynamics. Satellite patches invading large areas of invasible habitat present especially high risk.
引用
收藏
页码:593 / 608
页数:16
相关论文
共 83 条
[1]   SPREAD OF INVADING ORGANISMS [J].
ANDOW, DA ;
KAREIVA, PM ;
LEVIN, SA ;
OKUBO, A .
LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 1990, 4 (2-3) :177-188
[2]   The role of environmental context in mapping invasive plants with hyperspectral image data [J].
Andrew, Margaret E. ;
Ustin, Susan L. .
REMOTE SENSING OF ENVIRONMENT, 2008, 112 (12) :4301-4317
[3]  
[Anonymous], 1995, 5 ANN JPL AIRB EARTH
[4]   RATE OF WEED SPREAD IN SPATIALLY HETEROGENEOUS ENVIRONMENTS [J].
BERGELSON, J ;
NEWMAN, JA ;
FLORESROUX, EM .
ECOLOGY, 1993, 74 (04) :999-1011
[5]  
Blank RR, 1997, PLANT INVASIONS: STUDIES FROM NORTH AMERICA AND EUROPE, P69
[6]   Spatial and temporal patterns of exotic shrub invasion in an Australian tropical grassland [J].
Brown, JR ;
Carter, J .
LANDSCAPE ECOLOGY, 1998, 13 (02) :93-102
[7]   Woody plants in grasslands: Post-encroachment stand dynamics [J].
Browning, Dawn M. ;
Archer, Steven R. ;
Asner, Gregory P. ;
McClaran, Mitchel P. ;
Wessman, Carol A. .
ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2008, 18 (04) :928-944
[8]   Slowing down a pine invasion despite uncertainty in demography and dispersal [J].
Buckley, YM ;
Brockerhoff, E ;
Langer, L ;
Ledgard, N ;
North, H ;
Rees, M .
JOURNAL OF APPLIED ECOLOGY, 2005, 42 (06) :1020-1030
[9]   Managing plant population spread: Prediction and analysis using a simple model [J].
Bullock, James M. ;
Pywell, Richard F. ;
Coulson-Phillips, Sarah J. .
ECOLOGICAL APPLICATIONS, 2008, 18 (04) :945-953
[10]   Invasion by extremes: Population spread with variation in dispersal and reproduction [J].
Clark, JS ;
Lewis, M ;
Horvath, L .
AMERICAN NATURALIST, 2001, 157 (05) :537-554