Insecticide treatment of invasive ant colonies leads to secondary ant invasions and promotes the spread of invasive ants

IF 2.8 3区 环境科学与生态学 Q1 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Biological Invasions Pub Date : 2024-07-08 DOI:10.1007/s10530-024-03392-5
Grzegorz Buczkowski
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Abstract

Invasive ants are among the world’s most damaging invaders and are considered a significant threat to urban, natural, and agricultural habitats worldwide. Populations of invasive ants are notoriously difficult to eradicate once established and are typically managed using chemical tools, predominantly toxic baits and residual sprays. Most studies evaluating control efforts do not quantify post-treatment community-level response to control efforts, so the overall outcome of management efforts remains unknown and the efficacy of management efforts in mitigating invader impacts remains unclear. The potential of insecticide treatments to cause secondary ant invasions has not been previously examined. Secondary ant invasions, the proliferation of non-target invasive ants following efforts to suppress the dominant target invader is a potentially ubiquitous, yet rarely studied problem. Additionally, limited understanding of the interactions between co-occurring invaders can be problematic for predicting how the removal of only one invasive, a common management scenario, will affect the other invaders and native communities. The current study reports on the potential threat of secondary ant invasions following insecticide treatments and highlights future research needs to address this problem. Residual spray insecticide treatments were applied in an urban setting to control the invasive Argentine ant, Linepithema humile. While the study was limited to a single geographic area, results demonstrate that insecticide treatments can affect target and non-target species in unpredicted ways. Specifically, insecticides applied to control invasive L. humile provide effective short-term control but degrade relatively quickly and lead to secondary invasions by other invasive ants. Therefore, insecticide treatments are capable of causing secondary invasions by multiple invaders. Results demonstrate that invasive ant control is not simply precision removal of the target invader but a form of ecological disturbance with multiple positive and negative impacts on the ecosystem.

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对入侵蚁群的杀虫剂处理会导致蚂蚁的二次入侵,并促进入侵蚂蚁的扩散
入侵蚂蚁是世界上最具破坏性的入侵者之一,被认为是对全球城市、自然和农业栖息地的重大威胁。入侵蚂蚁种群一旦形成就很难根除,通常使用化学工具进行管理,主要是有毒诱饵和残留喷雾剂。大多数评估控制工作的研究都没有量化处理后群落对控制工作的反应,因此管理工作的总体结果仍不清楚,管理工作在减轻入侵者影响方面的功效也不明确。杀虫剂处理导致蚂蚁二次入侵的可能性以前还没有研究过。二次蚂蚁入侵是指在抑制主要目标入侵者的努力之后,非目标入侵蚂蚁的大量繁殖,这是一个潜在的普遍问题,但很少有人对此进行研究。此外,由于对同时出现的入侵者之间的相互作用了解有限,因此在预测移除一种入侵者(一种常见的管理方案)将如何影响其他入侵者和本地群落时可能会遇到问题。本研究报告了杀虫剂处理后蚂蚁二次入侵的潜在威胁,并强调了解决这一问题的未来研究需求。研究人员在城市环境中使用残留喷洒杀虫剂来控制入侵的阿根廷蚂蚁--Linepithema humile。虽然该研究仅限于单一地理区域,但结果表明,杀虫剂处理会以不可预知的方式影响目标和非目标物种。具体来说,杀虫剂用于控制入侵的蚁后(L. humile)可提供有效的短期控制,但降解相对较快,并导致其他入侵蚂蚁的二次入侵。因此,杀虫剂处理能够导致多种入侵者的二次入侵。研究结果表明,入侵蚂蚁控制并不是简单地精确清除目标入侵者,而是一种生态干扰,会对生态系统产生多种正面和负面影响。
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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.
期刊最新文献
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