Management of Invasive Water Hyacinth as Both a Nuisance Weed and Invertebrate Habitat

Q3 Agricultural and Biological Sciences San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science Pub Date : 2019-06-13 DOI:10.15447/SFEWS.2019V17ISS2ART5
E. Marineau, Matthew J. Perryman, S. Lawler, R. Hartman, P. Pratt
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Author(s): Donley Marineau, Erin; Perryman, Matthew J.; Lawler, Sharon P.; Hartman, Rosemary K.; Pratt, Paul D. | Abstract: Invasive species have many detrimental ecological and socio-economic effects. However, invasive species can also provide novel habitat for native species. The growing rate of biological invasions world-wide presents an urgent dilemma: how can natural resource managers minimize negative effects of invasive species without depleting native taxa that have come to rely on them? Adaptive management can provide a means to address this dilemma when invasive species management plans are crafted in novel environments. We present a case study of research in support of adaptive management that considers the role of invasive water hyacinth (Eichhornia crassipes [Mart.] Solms [Pontederiaceae]) management, using herbicides, in aquatic food web functioning in the Sacramento–San Joaquin River Delta of California, USA (the “Delta”). We hypothesized that herbicide applications under current management protocols would reduce the abundance and diversity of aquatic invertebrates because they would alter both structural and biological habitat. Using a Before, After, Control, Intervention (BACI) experiment, we sampled invertebrates per gram plant biomass before and 4 weeks after glyphosate applications in treated and untreated locations. There was more plant biomass in the late-season samples because dead, dying, and living plant materials were compacted. However, there were no detectable differences between control and treated sites — or for samples before versus after the treatment date—for invertebrate abundance, species richness, or evenness. This case study demonstrates that even decaying water hyacinth serves as habitat for invertebrates that may be forage for Delta fishes. We concluded that current management practices using glyphosate do not affect invertebrate abundance during a month-long period of weed decay. These results provide valuable feedback for the “evaluate and respond” component of the adaptive management process for water hyacinth control, and demonstrate how managers globally can and should consider potential food web effects in the course of their invasive species management efforts.
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作为有害杂草和无脊椎动物栖息地的入侵水葫芦的管理
作者:Donley Marineau,Erin;Perryman,Matthew J。;Lawler,Sharon P。;罗斯玛丽·哈特曼。;摘要:入侵物种具有许多有害的生态和社会经济影响。然而,入侵物种也可以为本地物种提供新的栖息地。世界范围内生物入侵的增长速度提出了一个紧迫的难题:自然资源管理者如何在不耗尽依赖入侵物种的本土类群的情况下,最大限度地减少入侵物种的负面影响?当在新环境中制定入侵物种管理计划时,适应性管理可以提供一种解决这一困境的方法。我们提出了一项支持适应性管理的研究案例,该研究考虑了入侵水葫芦(Eichhornia crassipes[Mart.]Solms[Ponderiacee])使用除草剂管理在美国加利福尼亚州萨克拉门托-圣华金河三角洲(“三角洲”)水生食物网功能中的作用。我们假设,在现行管理协议下使用除草剂会降低水生无脊椎动物的丰度和多样性,因为它们会改变结构和生物栖息地。使用前、后、对照、干预(BACI)实验,我们在处理和未处理地点施用草甘膦之前和之后4周,对每克植物生物量的无脊椎动物进行了采样。由于死的、垂死的和活的植物材料被压实,所以在晚季样品中有更多的植物生物量。然而,对照和处理地点之间——或者处理日期前后的样本——无脊椎动物丰度、物种丰富度或均匀度没有可检测的差异。这项案例研究表明,即使是腐烂的水葫芦也可以作为无脊椎动物的栖息地,这些无脊椎动物可能是三角洲鱼类的饲料。我们得出的结论是,在长达一个月的杂草腐烂期内,目前使用草甘膦的管理做法不会影响无脊椎动物的数量。这些结果为水葫芦控制的适应性管理过程中的“评估和响应”部分提供了有价值的反馈,并展示了全球管理者在入侵物种管理过程中如何能够也应该考虑潜在的食物网影响。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science
San Francisco Estuary and Watershed Science Environmental Science-Water Science and Technology
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
审稿时长
24 weeks
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