Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Solar Energy News .




FLORA AND FAUNA
On invasive species, Darwin had it right all along
by Staff Writers
Providence RI (SPX) Oct 08, 2014


An iceplant, from a region of high diversity in South Africa, is overtopping and killing a native shrub on the New Zealand coast, a region with far less diversity. Species that have had to struggle against robust competition are strong invaders in areas where natives have had an easier time evolutionarily. Image courtesy Jason Fridley.

Dov Sax of Brown University and Jason Fridley of Syracuse University aren't proposing a novel idea to explain species invasiveness. In fact, Charles Darwin articulated it first. What's new about Sax and Fridley's "Evolutionary Imbalance Hypothesis" (EIH) is that they've tested it using quantifiable evidence and report in Global Ecology and Biogeography that the EIH works well.

The EIH idea is this: Species from regions with deep and diverse evolutionary histories are more likely to become successful invaders in regions with less deep, less diverse evolutionary histories. To predict the probability of invasiveness, ecologists can quantify the imbalance between the evolutionary histories of "donor" and "recipient" regions as Sax and Fridley demonstrate in several examples.

Darwin's original insight was that the more challenges a region's species have faced in their evolution, the more robust they'll be in new environments.

"As natural selection acts by competition, it adapts the inhabitants of each country only in relation to the degree of perfection of their associates," Darwin wrote in 1859. Better tested species, such as those from larger regions, he reasoned, have "consequently been advanced through natural selection and competition to a higher stage of perfection or dominating power."

To Sax and Fridley the explanatory power of EIH suggests that when analyzing invasiveness, ecologists should add historical evolutionary imbalance to the other factors they consider.

"Invasion biology is well-studied now, but this is never listed there even though Darwin basically spelled it out," said Sax, associate of ecology and evolutionary biology. "It certainly hasn't been tested before. We think this is a really important part of the story."

Evidence for EIH
Advancing Darwin's insight from idea to hypothesis required determining a way to test it against measurable evidence. The ideal data would encapsulate a region's population size and diversity, relative environmental stability and habitat age, and the intensity of competition. Sax and Fridley found a suitable proxy: "phylogenetic diversity" (PD), an index of how many unique lineages have developed in a region over the time of their evolution.

"All else equal, our expectation is that biotas represented by lineages of greater number or longer evolutionary history should be more likely to have produced a more optimal solution to a given environmental problem, and it is this regional disparity, approximated by PD, that allows predictions of global invasion patterns," they wrote.

With a candidate measure, they put EIH to the test.

Using detailed databases on plant species in 35 regions of the world, they looked at the relative success of those species' invasiveness in three well-documented destinations: Eastern North America, the Czech Republic, and New Zealand.

They found that in all three regions, the higher the PD of a species' native region, the more likely it was to become invasive in its new home. The size of the effect varied among the three regions, which have different evolutionary histories, but it was statistically clear that plants forged in rough neighborhoods were better able to bully their way into a new region than those from evolutionarily more "naive" areas.

Sax and Fridley conducted another test of the EIH in animals by looking at cases where marine animals were suddenly able to mix after they became united by canals. The EIH predicts that an imbalance of evolutionary robustness between the sides, would allow a species-rich region to dominate a less diverse one on the other side of the canal by even more than a mere random mixing would suggest.

The idea has a paleontological precedent. When the Bering land bridge became the Bering Strait, it offered marine mollusks a new polar path between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Previous research has shown that more kinds of mollusks successfully migrated from the diverse Pacific to the less diverse Atlantic than vice-versa, and by more so than by their relative abundance.

In the new paper, Sax and Fridley examined what has happened since the openings of the Suez Canal in Egypt, the Erie Canal in New York, and the Panama Canal. The vastly greater evolutionary diversity in the Red Sea and Indian Ocean compared to the Mediterranean Sea and the Atlantic led to an overwhelming flow of species north through the Suez.

But evolutionary imbalances across the Erie and Panama Canals were fairly small (the Panama canal connects freshwater drainages of the Atlantic and Pacific that were much more ecologically similar than the oceans) so as EIH again predicts, there was a more even balance of cross-canal species invasions.

Applicable predictions
Sax and Fridley acknowledge in the paper that the EIH does not singlehandedly predict the success of individual species in specific invasions. Instead it allows for ecosystem managers to assess a relative invasiveness risk based on the evolutionary history of their ecosystem and that of other regions. Take, for instance, a wildlife official in a historically isolated ecosystem such as an island.

"They already know to be worried, but this would suggest they should be more worried about imports from some parts of the world than others," Sax said.

Not all invasions are bad, Sax noted. Newcomers can provide some ecosystem services - such as erosion control - more capably if they can become established. The EIH can help in assessments of whether a new wave of potential invasion is likely to change the way an ecosystem will provide its services, for better or worse.

"It might help to explain why non-natives in some cases might improve ecosystem functioning," Sax said.

But perhaps Darwin already knew all that.

.


Related Links
Brown University
Darwin Today At TerraDaily.com






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle




Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News





FLORA AND FAUNA
Two bison reintroduced in Romania die of bluetongue disease
Timisoara, Romania (AFP) Oct 06, 2014
Two of 17 European bison released this spring in Romania's Carpathian mountains where they had become extinct due to poaching have died of bluetongue disease, the national veterinary agency said Monday. They were found dead in the wild zone of the Tarcu mountains, where 17 bison from Sweden, Germany, Switzerland and Italy were released in May in one of the biggest such operations in Europe. ... read more


FLORA AND FAUNA
Bioenergy: Australia's forgotten renewable energy source (so far)

Maverick Synfuels Introduces Maverick Oasis

Plant variants point the way to improved biofuel production

Search for better biofuels microbes leads to the human gut

FLORA AND FAUNA
Robot researcher combines nature to nurture 'superhuman' navigation

Taste-testing robots in Thailand to ensure local restaurants are doing country proud

System designed to improve hand function lost to nerve damage

Football-size underwater robot could protect American ports

FLORA AND FAUNA
Turkey may need to go green, director says

Scottish renewable energy output up 30 percent from 2013

UAE's Masdar joins mega wind project off Britain

RWE Innogy gets new British wind energy running

FLORA AND FAUNA
Lamborghini reveals Asterion LPI-910, hybrid supercar that hits 199 mph and gets 57 mpg

High-tech gadgets drive wow factor at Paris motor show

Musk: Next Tesla cars will self-drive 90 percent of the time

EU warns Germany as car coolant row heats up

FLORA AND FAUNA
LEDs: A light-bulb moment that is changing the world

LED light earns physics Nobel for Japanese-born trio

New Absorber Will Lead to Better Biosensors

Stressed Out: Research Sheds New Light on Why Rechargeable Batteries Fail

FLORA AND FAUNA
Sweden's Social Democrats and Greens agree on nuclear freeze

Bolivia to spend $2 bn on nuclear energy plant: Morales

SAfrica denies corruption in Russia nuclear plant pact

Moscow, Kazakhstan initial deal to build Kazakh nuclear plant

FLORA AND FAUNA
First large-scale carbon capture goes online in Canada

Canada will miss 2020 target to cut carbon emissions

Scotland upset with London power decisions

Poland may veto CO2 emission cuts in EU talks

FLORA AND FAUNA
Climate program will protect 9 million hectares of Congo forest

If trees could talk

Time for worldwide fund to save mangroves: UNEP

Philippines 'breaks world tree-planting record'




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. All websites are published in Australia and are solely subject to Australian law and governed by Fair Use principals for news reporting and research purposes. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA news reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement, agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement All images and articles appearing on Space Media Network have been edited or digitally altered in some way. Any requests to remove copyright material will be acted upon in a timely and appropriate manner. Any attempt to extort money from Space Media Network will be ignored and reported to Australian Law Enforcement Agencies as a potential case of financial fraud involving the use of a telephonic carriage device or postal service.