Ecological interactions between invasive and native species
pdf (Engels)

Trefwoorden

invasion ecology
riparian ecology
EU IAS Regulation
native species
competitive displacement
Fallopia japonica
Pseudorasbora parva
Trachemys scripta elegans
Procyon lotor
biological invasion

Citeerhulp

Ecological interactions between invasive and native species. (2024). Zoological Records and Reviews, 4(1), 34-41. https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.19162659

Samenvatting

Biological invasions rank among the leading drivers of global biodiversity loss, yet the mechanistic pathways through
which invasive species alter native community structure -- competition, predation, hybridisation, disease transmission,
and ecosystem engineering -- remain incompletely quantified in multi-species field contexts. This study characterises
ecological interactions between four established invasive species -- Procyon lotor (raccoon), Trachemys scripta elegans
(red-eared slider), Pseudorasbora parva (topmouth gudgeon), and Fallopia japonica (Japanese knotweed, as habitat
modifier) -- and their native ecological counterparts across 12 freshwater and riparian sites in the Netherlands and
Bavaria, Germany (n = 8,614 individual records, 2021-2023). Competitive displacement was quantified by comparing
native species occupancy and abundance at invaded versus uninvaded paired sites. Procyon lotor reduced native
waterbird nest success by 38.4 +- 6.2% through egg predation (generalised linear mixed model: z = 4.81, p < 0.001).
Trachemys scripta elegans competitively displaced Emys orbicularis at 8 of 9 co-occurrence sites, reducing native turtle
basking time by 61.3 +- 8.4%. Pseudorasbora parva presence reduced native cyprinid species richness by 2.8 +- 0.6
species per site (t(10) = 4.63, p < 0.001), mediated by both competition for zooplankton resources and rosette virus
(Sphaerothecum destruens) transmission. Fallopia japonica invasion reduced riparian ground-dwelling invertebrate
richness by 44.2% within invaded patches relative to adjacent uninvaded margins. These findings quantify multi-pathway
invasion impacts and inform priority ranking for management interventions under the EU Invasive Alien Species
Regulation (EU 1143/2014).

pdf (Engels)

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