Predicting distribution and establishment of two invasive alien Daphnia species in diverse lakes in New Zealand-Aotearoa

IF 2.8 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Biological Invasions Pub Date : 2024-05-29 DOI:10.1007/s10530-024-03342-1
Carolyn W. Burns, Andrew Rees, Susanna A. Wood
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Abstract

The freshwater zooplankton of New Zealand-Aotearoa are species-poor with only two indigenous Daphnia species: D. thomsoni, and D. tewaipounamu. Over the last two decades, two species of invasive non-indigenous Daphnia, D. pulicaria/pulex and D. galeata, have become well established in many lakes in New Zealand-Aotearoa and their distribution appears to be rapidly increasing. We report the current distribution of these two invasive species in approximately 300 lakes throughout New Zealand-Aotearoa and test the hypothesis that the distribution and establishment of these invaders is more closely related to human access to a lake than to any environmental attributes of a lake’s water or biota and consider potential implications of our findings for lake management. Boosted regression tree analysis identified total nitrogen and distance from the coast (D. pulicaria) and annual lake temperature (D. galeata) as key variables explaining current distributions. Inclusion of spatial autocorrelation overwhelmed other explanatory variables, highlighting the greater likelihood of spread from known source locations. Proximity to a road was an important predictor for D. pulicaria, and when tested separately both invasive Daphnia occurred significantly more often in lakes within 200 m of a road. Critically, D. galeata’s realised niche completely envelopes D. thomsoni’s, which could force the native species to become extinct through competitive exclusion. These results suggest that the spread of D. pulicaria and D. galeata to lakes where they do not yet occur is unlikely to be prevented unless public access to these waterways is denied or strictly controlled.

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预测两种外来入侵水蚤物种在新西兰-奥特亚罗瓦不同湖泊中的分布和定居情况
新西兰-奥特亚罗瓦的淡水浮游动物物种稀少,只有两个本地水蚤物种:D. thomsoni 和 D. tewaipounamu。在过去的二十年里,两种入侵的非本土水蚤--D. pulicaria/pulex和D. galeata--已经在新西兰-阿奥特亚罗亚的许多湖泊中扎根,而且其分布范围似乎正在迅速扩大。我们报告了这两种入侵物种目前在新西兰-奥特亚罗瓦约 300 个湖泊中的分布情况,并验证了这样一个假设,即这些入侵者的分布和建立与人类进入湖泊的机会关系密切,而与湖泊水体或生物群的任何环境属性关系密切,同时还考虑了我们的发现对湖泊管理的潜在影响。提升回归树分析发现,总氮和与海岸的距离(D. pulicaria)以及年湖温(D. galeata)是解释当前分布的关键变量。纳入空间自相关性压倒了其他解释变量,突出了从已知来源地扩散的更大可能性。靠近道路是预测 D. pulicaria 的一个重要因素,当单独测试时,这两种入侵水蚤在距离道路 200 米以内的湖泊中出现的频率明显更高。重要的是,D. galeata的现实生态位完全包围了D. thomsoni的生态位,这可能会迫使本地物种因竞争排斥而灭绝。这些结果表明,除非拒绝或严格控制公众进入这些水道,否则不太可能阻止 D. pulicaria 和 D. galeata 向它们尚未出现的湖泊扩散。
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来源期刊
Biological Invasions
Biological Invasions 环境科学-生态学
CiteScore
6.00
自引率
6.90%
发文量
248
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Biological Invasions publishes research and synthesis papers on patterns and processes of biological invasions in terrestrial, freshwater, and marine (including brackish) ecosystems. Also of interest are scholarly papers on management and policy issues as they relate to conservation programs and the global amelioration or control of invasions. The journal will consider proposals for special issues resulting from conferences or workshops on invasions.There are no page charges to publish in this journal.
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