火地岛毛毛毛蝠(Dasypodidae)的生物入侵过程的进展:一个新的两国挑战

J. Cabello, Alejandro E. J. Valenzuela, Christopher B. Anderson
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引用次数: 4

摘要

哺乳动物对岛屿的生物入侵已被确定为全球生物多样性丧失的主要原因之一,但研究和管理一直偏重于那些已经处于入侵最后阶段的物种。因此,管理者和决策者有必要及时了解这些物种的生物入侵过程,以实施包括引种和扩展阶段的保护措施。特别重要的是,要防止最初的入侵阶段被忽视,要么是由于物种的生物学特征,如隐秘的习性或低密度,要么是由于可能限制这种偏见的社会因素,如物种被引入一个政治管辖范围并扩展到另一个当局和科学家不知道新入侵区域的物种。我们提出了关于大型毛犰狳(Chaetophractus villosus)扩张的新记录,这是智利和阿根廷大陆的本土物种,但却是火地岛(TDF)的外来物种,这使我们能够提醒这一生物入侵过程中扩张阶段的变化。犰狳于1982年被引入TDF的阿根廷一侧,在那里它占据了Río格兰德市和圣Sebastián湾之间大西洋海岸的一条狭长地带,它们的洞穴与天然气和石油管道高度相关。2014年,根据其生态影响,犰狳被列为重点管理物种;然而,到目前为止,我们还没有发现任何计划、项目或立法来控制这种物种的入侵。这项工作的新记录扩大了犰狳在TDF的阿根廷和智利部分的分布。我们发现自然分散和人类运输是它们扩张的可能原因和媒介。这个案例再次表明,在生物入侵的研究和管理方面缺乏两国和社会生态的观点,这对保护本地生态系统造成了严重后果。我们强调,这个案例已经成为一个两国生物入侵的过程,应该在两国的管理者和决策者之间迅速解决。
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Avance en el proceso de la invasión biológica del peludo Chaetophractus villosus (Dasypodidae) en la Isla Grande de Tierra del Fuego: un nuevo desafío binacional
Biological invasions by mammals on islands have been identified as one of the main causes of global biodiversity loss, but research and management has been biased towards those species that are already in the final stage of the invasion. Therefore, it is necessary for managers and decision makers to keep updated on the biological invasion process of these species to implement conservation measures that also include introduction and expansion stages. In particular, it is important to prevent the initial invasion stages from going unnoticed, either due to the species’ biological characteristics, such as cryptic habits or low densities, but also social factors that could condition this bias, such as species that were introduced in one political jurisdiction and expanded to another whose authorities and scientists were unaware of the newly invaded area. We present new records about the expansion of the large hairy armadillo (Chaetophractus villosus), a native species in the Chilean and Argentine mainland, but an exotic on Tierra del Fuego Island (TDF), that allow us to alert a change to the expansion stage in this biological invasion process. The armadillo was introduced in the Argentine side of TDF in 1982, where it occupied a thin strip of the Atlantic coast between Río Grande city and San Sebastián Bay, and their burrows were highly associated with natural gas and oil pipelines. In 2014, the armadillo was classified, based on its ecological impacts, among the priority species for management; however to date we found no plan, project or legislation focused on controlling this species’ invasion. This work’s new records extend the armadillo’s distribution, on both the Argentine and Chilean sectors of TDF. We detected both natural dispersion and human transportation as possible causes and vectors of their expansion. This case again demonstrates the lack of a binational and socio-ecological perspective on the study and management of biological invasions, which has severe consequences for the conservation of native ecosystems. We highlight that this case has become a binational biological invasion process that should be quickly addressed together between the managers and decision makers of both countries.
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