Impacts of Invasive Species on Food Webs: A Review of Empirical Data

被引:281
作者
David, P. [1 ]
Thebault, E. [2 ]
Anneville, O. [3 ]
Duyck, P. -F. [4 ]
Chapuis, E. [5 ,6 ]
Loeuille, N. [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Montpellier, CNRS, UMR 5175, Ctr Ecol Fonct & Evolut,UMIII EPHE, Montpellier, France
[2] Univ Paris Diderot, Inst Ecol & Environm Sci, UMR 7618, Sorbonne Univ,UPMC,CNRS,IRD,INRA, Paris, France
[3] Univ Savoie Mont Blanc, INRA, UMR CARRTEL 42, Thonon Les Bains, France
[4] CIRAD, UMR PVBMT, F-97410 St Pierre, Reunion, France
[5] Univ Reunion, CIRAD, UMR PVBMT 3P, St Pierre, Reunion, France
[6] Univ Montpellier, CIRAD, IRD, UMR IPME, Montpellier, France
来源
NETWORKS OF INVASION: A SYNTHESIS OF CONCEPTS | 2017年 / 56卷
关键词
RAPID EVOLUTION; BIOTIC RESISTANCE; TROPHIC CASCADES; FRUIT-FLIES; BOTTOM-UP; INTERFERENCE COMPETITION; COEVOLUTIONARY NETWORKS; SUCCESSIVE INVASIONS; APPARENT COMPETITION; RESOURCE COMPETITION;
D O I
10.1016/bs.aecr.2016.10.001
中图分类号
Q14 [生态学(生物生态学)];
学科分类号
071012 ; 0713 ;
摘要
We review empirical studies on how bioinvasions alter food webs and how a food-web perspective may change their prediction and management. Predation is found to underlie the most spectacular damage in invaded systems, sometimes cascading down to primary producers. Indirect trophic effects (exploitative and apparent competition) also affect native species, but rarely provoke extinctions, while invaders often have positive bottom-up effects on higher trophic levels. As a result of these trophic interactions, and of nontrophic ones such as mutualisms or ecosystem engineering, invasions can profoundly modify the structure of the entire food web. While few studies have been undertaken at this scale, those that have highlight how network properties such as species richness, phenotypic diversity, and functional diversity, limit the likelihood and impacts of invasions by saturating niche space. Vulnerable communities have unsaturated niche space mainly because of evolutionary history in isolation (islands), dispersal limitation, or anthropogenic disturbance. Evolution also modulates the insertion of invaders into a food web. Exotics and natives are evolutionarily new to one another, and invasion tends to retain alien species that happen to have advantage over residents in trophic interactions. Resident species, therefore, often rapidly evolve traits to better tolerate or exploit invaders-a process that may eventually restore more balanced food webs and prevent extinctions. We discuss how network-based principles might guide management policies to better live with invaders, rather than to undertake the daunting (and often illusory) task of eradicating them one by one.
引用
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页码:1 / +
页数:13
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